Research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia

This project used interior design to reimagine an academic research space as a place that encourages Indigenous research practices and fosters belonging. Post-secondary education is essential to the continuation of countless disciplines and the betterment of Canadian people. However, in its current...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Allary, Courtney
Other Authors: Karpan, Cynthia, Bailey, Shawn (Architecture/Engineering), Loewen, Carla (Indigenous Student Centre)
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36746
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/36746 2023-06-18T03:40:39+02:00 Research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia Allary, Courtney Karpan, Cynthia Bailey, Shawn (Architecture/Engineering) Loewen, Carla (Indigenous Student Centre) 2022-08-24T17:45:02Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36746 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36746 open access interior design Indigenous Indigenous architecture master thesis 2022 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:45:18Z This project used interior design to reimagine an academic research space as a place that encourages Indigenous research practices and fosters belonging. Post-secondary education is essential to the continuation of countless disciplines and the betterment of Canadian people. However, in its current Western state, the Canadian post-secondary system is not in a place that properly accommodates the Indigenous student population. Historically, it has received an inequitable, much less an enthusiastic promoter of Indigenous research and academia. Modern institutions do not possess the infrastructure for encouraging knowledge keeping or extensive cultural integration, nor the interest in preserving Indigenous language, history or culture, which can negatively affect the work and lives of First Nations, Métis and Inuit scholars. Academic spaces designed specifically for Indigenous students and professionals and their particular research methodologies and knowledge types have become a typology of recent importance. The concern comes from increased interest among Indigenous students and added support of Indigenous peoples to pursue post-secondary education by Indigenous governments, the federal government, and other advocate organizations. While many institutions have a relatively insignificant discourse on what constitutes Indigenous physical space in academic environments, there exist positive opportunities for revaluating the roles of Indigenous students and researchers in physical, academic environments. This project explored Indigenous placemaking to derive a unique typology and set of spaces that will take up space in the current academic research model and strengthen Indigenous roots in Canadian academia. This project had two objectives: one, to create a concrete, dedicated space for the creation and circulation of Indigenous knowledge for application in both academic research and community efforts, and two, to understand how a sense of “place” for Indigenous students is able to be improved upon using interior ... Master Thesis First Nations inuit MSpace at the University of Manitoba
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
topic interior design
Indigenous
Indigenous architecture
spellingShingle interior design
Indigenous
Indigenous architecture
Allary, Courtney
Research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia
topic_facet interior design
Indigenous
Indigenous architecture
description This project used interior design to reimagine an academic research space as a place that encourages Indigenous research practices and fosters belonging. Post-secondary education is essential to the continuation of countless disciplines and the betterment of Canadian people. However, in its current Western state, the Canadian post-secondary system is not in a place that properly accommodates the Indigenous student population. Historically, it has received an inequitable, much less an enthusiastic promoter of Indigenous research and academia. Modern institutions do not possess the infrastructure for encouraging knowledge keeping or extensive cultural integration, nor the interest in preserving Indigenous language, history or culture, which can negatively affect the work and lives of First Nations, Métis and Inuit scholars. Academic spaces designed specifically for Indigenous students and professionals and their particular research methodologies and knowledge types have become a typology of recent importance. The concern comes from increased interest among Indigenous students and added support of Indigenous peoples to pursue post-secondary education by Indigenous governments, the federal government, and other advocate organizations. While many institutions have a relatively insignificant discourse on what constitutes Indigenous physical space in academic environments, there exist positive opportunities for revaluating the roles of Indigenous students and researchers in physical, academic environments. This project explored Indigenous placemaking to derive a unique typology and set of spaces that will take up space in the current academic research model and strengthen Indigenous roots in Canadian academia. This project had two objectives: one, to create a concrete, dedicated space for the creation and circulation of Indigenous knowledge for application in both academic research and community efforts, and two, to understand how a sense of “place” for Indigenous students is able to be improved upon using interior ...
author2 Karpan, Cynthia
Bailey, Shawn (Architecture/Engineering)
Loewen, Carla (Indigenous Student Centre)
format Master Thesis
author Allary, Courtney
author_facet Allary, Courtney
author_sort Allary, Courtney
title Research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia
title_short Research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia
title_full Research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia
title_fullStr Research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia
title_full_unstemmed Research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia
title_sort research is an offering: decolonizing interior spaces for indigenous belonging in academia
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36746
genre First Nations
inuit
genre_facet First Nations
inuit
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36746
op_rights open access
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