Aboriginal Public Servants: Leadership in the British Columbia Public Service

This thesis provides preliminary, qualitative research that explores whether there is a common understanding of Aboriginal public servant leadership within the British Columbia (BC) Public Service. An interpretive, grounded theory approach underpinned by attention to Indigenous methodologies was use...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Main, Fionna Miriam
Other Authors: Althaus, Catherine
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5255
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spelling ftuvicpubl:oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/5255 2023-05-15T16:16:39+02:00 Aboriginal Public Servants: Leadership in the British Columbia Public Service Main, Fionna Miriam Althaus, Catherine 2014 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5255 English en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5255 Available to the World Wide Web Public Servant Leadership Indigenous Aboriginal First Nations Thesis 2014 ftuvicpubl 2022-05-19T06:13:35Z This thesis provides preliminary, qualitative research that explores whether there is a common understanding of Aboriginal public servant leadership within the British Columbia (BC) Public Service. An interpretive, grounded theory approach underpinned by attention to Indigenous methodologies was used in this thesis. Research was conducted using semi-structured interviews with 22 self-identified Aboriginal peoples within the BC Public Service. The results identify properties of three analytical perspectives of leadership that interact in the context of Aboriginal public servants in British Columbia: (1) individual; (2) Indigenous, traditional or family setting; and (3) bureaucracy/public service. A linking theme across these analytical perspectives, “it’s personal not individual”, is proposed that influences an approach that interviewed Aboriginal public servants use in their professional positions and in their daily life. This study concludes that although there is not one specific understanding of leadership among Aboriginal public servants, their personal commitment to improving the well-being of their peoples may be the basis for their leadership work to facilitate and build bridges of understanding between communities and government. In addition, there is a call to non-indigenous public servants to consider their own leadership and share responsibility for bridge building alongside their Aboriginal colleagues. Graduate 0617 fionnamain@gmail.com Thesis First Nations University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace
institution Open Polar
collection University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace
op_collection_id ftuvicpubl
language English
topic Public Servant
Leadership
Indigenous
Aboriginal
First Nations
spellingShingle Public Servant
Leadership
Indigenous
Aboriginal
First Nations
Main, Fionna Miriam
Aboriginal Public Servants: Leadership in the British Columbia Public Service
topic_facet Public Servant
Leadership
Indigenous
Aboriginal
First Nations
description This thesis provides preliminary, qualitative research that explores whether there is a common understanding of Aboriginal public servant leadership within the British Columbia (BC) Public Service. An interpretive, grounded theory approach underpinned by attention to Indigenous methodologies was used in this thesis. Research was conducted using semi-structured interviews with 22 self-identified Aboriginal peoples within the BC Public Service. The results identify properties of three analytical perspectives of leadership that interact in the context of Aboriginal public servants in British Columbia: (1) individual; (2) Indigenous, traditional or family setting; and (3) bureaucracy/public service. A linking theme across these analytical perspectives, “it’s personal not individual”, is proposed that influences an approach that interviewed Aboriginal public servants use in their professional positions and in their daily life. This study concludes that although there is not one specific understanding of leadership among Aboriginal public servants, their personal commitment to improving the well-being of their peoples may be the basis for their leadership work to facilitate and build bridges of understanding between communities and government. In addition, there is a call to non-indigenous public servants to consider their own leadership and share responsibility for bridge building alongside their Aboriginal colleagues. Graduate 0617 fionnamain@gmail.com
author2 Althaus, Catherine
format Thesis
author Main, Fionna Miriam
author_facet Main, Fionna Miriam
author_sort Main, Fionna Miriam
title Aboriginal Public Servants: Leadership in the British Columbia Public Service
title_short Aboriginal Public Servants: Leadership in the British Columbia Public Service
title_full Aboriginal Public Servants: Leadership in the British Columbia Public Service
title_fullStr Aboriginal Public Servants: Leadership in the British Columbia Public Service
title_full_unstemmed Aboriginal Public Servants: Leadership in the British Columbia Public Service
title_sort aboriginal public servants: leadership in the british columbia public service
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5255
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5255
op_rights Available to the World Wide Web
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