Anishinaabeg Women's Stories of Wellbeing: Physical Activity, Restoring Wellbeing, and Confronting the Settler Colonial Deficit Analysis
Colonial Legacies and Collaborative Action: Improving Indigenous Peoples’ Health Care in Canada
Decolonizing Approaches to Inuit Community Wellness: Conversations With Elders in a Nunavut Community
Decolonizing Knowledge Development in Health Research Cultural Safety through the Lens of Hawaiian Homestead Residents
Decolonizing Motherhood: Exampining Birthing Experiences of Urban Indigenous Women in Nova Scotia
Sociology Thesis (MA) -- Acadia University, 2019.
Decolonizing Research
Chapter in Women's Health in Canada : Challenges of Intersectionality, 2nd Edition. To view chapter scroll down to page 165.
Development of a Decolonising Framework for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Policy Analysis in Australia
Reviews Australian policies regarding Indigenous health.
Evaluation of a Native Youth Leadership Program Grounded in Cherokee Culture: The “Remember the Removal” Program
Evaluation of the Indigenous Relationship and Cultural Safety Courses among a sample of Indigenous Services Canada nurses
Exploring Why and How Encounters with the Norwegian Health-care System can be Considered Culturally Unsafe by North Sami-Speaking Patients and Relatives: A Qualitative Study Based on 11 Interviews
For the Love of Our Children: An Indigenous Connectedness Framework
Frantz Fanon and the Decolonization of Psychiatry
Homicide and Indigenous peoples in North America: A structural analysis
“If You Fall Down, You Get Back Up”: Creating a Space for Testimony and Witnessing by Urban Indigenous Women and Girls
The Impact of Indigenous Cultural-Safety Education Programs: A Literature Review
Improving Access to Indigenous Medicine for Patients in Hospital-based Settings: A Challenge for Health Systems in Northern Canada
Indigenous Cultural Safety, Cultural Humility and Anti-racism Learning
Resources
Indigenous Harm Reduction = Reducing the Harms of Colonialism
Indigenous Health: Applying Truth and Reconciliation in Alberta Health Services
Article examines how Alberta Health Services (AHS) can work to address the health disparities faced by Indigenous peoples in the province. Focuses on collaborative community engagement, relationship building and Indigenous self-determination.
Indigenous Research Methodology and the Indigenous Academic
Indigenous Trauma Is Not a Frontier: Breaking Free from Colonial Economies of Trauma and Responding to Trafficking, Disappearances, and Deaths of Indigenous Women and Girls
Kahwà:tsire: Indigenous Families in a Family Therapy Practice with the Indigenous Worldview as the Foundation
The Many Challenges of Increasing Indigenous Faculty at Medical Schools
Miýo-pimatisiwin Developing Indigenous Cultural Responsiveness Theory (ICRT): Improving Indigenous Health and Well-Being
Reconciling Community-Based Indigenous Research and Academic Practices: Knowing Principles is not Always Enough
Research Governance in NunatuKavut: Engagement, Expectations, and Evolution
Responsible Representation and Collaboration in Supporting Indigenous Maternal Health in Canada
The RIPPLES of Meaningful Involvement: A Framework for Meaningfully Involving Indigenous Peoples in Health Policy Decision-Making
Spirit-Based Research: A Tactic for Surviving Trauma in Decolonizing Research
Looks at the mental and emotional toll of trauma-based research for Indigenous researchers and provides a pathway for copying.
Structures Last Longer than Intentions: Creation of Ongomiizwin – Indigenous Institute of Health and Healing at the University of Manitoba
Towards Indigenous Social Work Practice: Addressing Professional Challenges in Working with Homeless Greenlanders in Aalborg, Denmark
Trauma, Child Development, Healing and Resilience: A Review of Literature with Focus on Indigenous Peoples and Communities
Truth Respect and Recognition: Addressing Barriers to Indigenous Maternity Care
In response to the study “Prenatal Care among Mothers Involved with Child Protection Services in Manitoba.” Authors note several biases in the study including: failure to discuss negative stereotypes resulting in differential care, and a disregard of resurgent community-led models of care.
Whose Land is It Anyway? A Manual for Decolonization
Why are Indigenous Affairs Policies Framed in ways that Undermine Indigenous Health and Equity?
Examines how the framing of speeches by three different political groups impact Indigenous populations access to health equity.