The Importance of Being Disruptive: On Decolonising Creative Research Methods
Want to present at the 2024 Creative Methods conference? The conference offers both face-to-face and online opportunities. Find more information and the call for proposals on conference organizer Helen Kara’s blog.
Caroline Lenette offered the keynote address for day 2 of the inaugural International Creative Research Methods Conference on 11 September 2023 in Manchester, England. She is the author of Arts-based methods in refugee research: Creating sanctuary (2019, Springer) and Participatory Action Research: Ethics and Decolonization (Oxford University Press, 2022).
Dr. Lenette also contributed a substantive post to Methodspace, “Participatory Action Research as a Tool for Decolonising Research.”
Methodspace posts about decolonizing research and Indigenous methods
Decolonizing research methods means rethinking how we look at participants and problems. In the digital world there are even more ways the European West exerts cultural, economic, and political control. At the same time, the digital world allows researchers to conduct studies across the distances.
Co-authors share about a topic of decolonial research, privilege, and ethics. They write this piece in two parts, narrating their understanding of the experience and how it relates to power hierarchies and researcher responsibility.
Caroline Lenette offered a keynote address at the International Creative Research Methods conference, September 2023. See the address and learn about the 2024 conference here.
View the webinar and find a multidisciplinary collection of posts and videos from Alfredo Ortiz Aragón, Rosalind Beadle, Ernie Stringer and their colleagues.
Decolonisation is not a peripheral but central concern to social research for change. Learn more from Caroline Lenette, author of Participatory Action Research: Ethics and Decolonization.
For researchers interested in incorporating equity into their work, it all starts at the very beginning with designing the study. Learn more in this guest post!
Ron Gross, author of The Independent Scholar’s Handbook offers encouragement and advice to indies.
What does it mean to be an independent researcher and scholar? Learn from Dr. Helen Kara, who has made an independent career.
It is a new month, with a new theme” “Be expansive: Research outside academia.” Let’s get started!
Watch the recorded “Understanding cultural issues in research design” webinar and find relevant resources.
How can you conduct research in cultures different from your own? See this collection of open-access articles for ideas.
We received many questions in this lively webinar. Watch the recording and read the panel’s responses in this post.
To do international research equitably requires a change to mind-sets and a change of established practices that have come under scrutiny for being unfair, exploitative, and non-inclusive.
Although Indigenous scholars have been documenting Indigenous research methodologies, little has been written on the practical considerations of doing research across Indigenous/Settler contexts. Read these open access articles as part of the Indigenous & Intercultural Research focus this month.
Read this collection of multidisciplinary articles to explore epistemological questions in Indigenous research.