Indigenous Pathways into Social Research
Voices of a New Generation
Herausgeber: Mertens, Donna M; Chilisa, Bagele; Cram, Fiona
Indigenous Pathways into Social Research
Voices of a New Generation
Herausgeber: Mertens, Donna M; Chilisa, Bagele; Cram, Fiona
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The life stories included here present the journeys of over 30 indigenous researchers from six continents and many disciplines, including the challenges and oppression they have faced, their strategies for overcoming them, and how their work has produced more meaningful research and a more just society.
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The life stories included here present the journeys of over 30 indigenous researchers from six continents and many disciplines, including the challenges and oppression they have faced, their strategies for overcoming them, and how their work has produced more meaningful research and a more just society.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 414
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. April 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 157mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9781598746952
- ISBN-10: 1598746952
- Artikelnr.: 35945611
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 414
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. April 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 157mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9781598746952
- ISBN-10: 1598746952
- Artikelnr.: 35945611
Bagele Chilisa, Donna M Mertens, Fiona Cram
1: The Journey Begins
2: The Process that Led Me to Become an Indigenous Researcher
3: I Never Really Had Any Role Models
4: Indigenism, Public Intellectuals, and the Forever Opposed-Or, the Makings of a "Hori Academic"
5: Becoming a Kaupapa M?ori Researcher
6: An African Narrative: The Journey of an Indigenous Social Researcher in South Africa
7: Drawn from the Traditions of Cameroon: Lessons from Twenty-One Years of Practice
8: Indigenous Research with a Cultural Context
9: Being and Becoming an Indigenous Social Researcher
10: Indigenous Researcher's Thoughts: An Experience from Research with Communities in Burkina Faso Using Participatory Methods
11: Becoming an Indigenous Researcher in Interior Alaska: Sharing the Transformative Journey
12: An Aboriginal Health Worker's Research Story
13: Nurturing the Gift of Understanding Different Realities
14: Inuujunga: The Intricacy of Indigenous and Western Epistemologies in the Arctic
15: The Context within: My Journey into Research
16: Prospects and Challenges of Becoming an Indigenous Researcher
17: Hinerauwh?riki 1 : Tapestries of Life for Four M?ori Women in Evaluation
18: Research in Relationship with Humans, the Spirit World, and the Natural World
19: Lens from the "Bottom of the Well"
20: Neyo way in ik issi: A Family Practice of Indigenist Research Informed by Land
21: A Native Papua New Guinea Researcher
22: From Refusal to Getting Involved in Romani Research
23: Interpreting the Journey: Where Words, Stories Formed
24: The Onward Journey
2: The Process that Led Me to Become an Indigenous Researcher
3: I Never Really Had Any Role Models
4: Indigenism, Public Intellectuals, and the Forever Opposed-Or, the Makings of a "Hori Academic"
5: Becoming a Kaupapa M?ori Researcher
6: An African Narrative: The Journey of an Indigenous Social Researcher in South Africa
7: Drawn from the Traditions of Cameroon: Lessons from Twenty-One Years of Practice
8: Indigenous Research with a Cultural Context
9: Being and Becoming an Indigenous Social Researcher
10: Indigenous Researcher's Thoughts: An Experience from Research with Communities in Burkina Faso Using Participatory Methods
11: Becoming an Indigenous Researcher in Interior Alaska: Sharing the Transformative Journey
12: An Aboriginal Health Worker's Research Story
13: Nurturing the Gift of Understanding Different Realities
14: Inuujunga: The Intricacy of Indigenous and Western Epistemologies in the Arctic
15: The Context within: My Journey into Research
16: Prospects and Challenges of Becoming an Indigenous Researcher
17: Hinerauwh?riki 1 : Tapestries of Life for Four M?ori Women in Evaluation
18: Research in Relationship with Humans, the Spirit World, and the Natural World
19: Lens from the "Bottom of the Well"
20: Neyo way in ik issi: A Family Practice of Indigenist Research Informed by Land
21: A Native Papua New Guinea Researcher
22: From Refusal to Getting Involved in Romani Research
23: Interpreting the Journey: Where Words, Stories Formed
24: The Onward Journey
1: The Journey Begins
2: The Process that Led Me to Become an Indigenous Researcher
3: I Never Really Had Any Role Models
4: Indigenism, Public Intellectuals, and the Forever Opposed-Or, the Makings of a "Hori Academic"
5: Becoming a Kaupapa M?ori Researcher
6: An African Narrative: The Journey of an Indigenous Social Researcher in South Africa
7: Drawn from the Traditions of Cameroon: Lessons from Twenty-One Years of Practice
8: Indigenous Research with a Cultural Context
9: Being and Becoming an Indigenous Social Researcher
10: Indigenous Researcher's Thoughts: An Experience from Research with Communities in Burkina Faso Using Participatory Methods
11: Becoming an Indigenous Researcher in Interior Alaska: Sharing the Transformative Journey
12: An Aboriginal Health Worker's Research Story
13: Nurturing the Gift of Understanding Different Realities
14: Inuujunga: The Intricacy of Indigenous and Western Epistemologies in the Arctic
15: The Context within: My Journey into Research
16: Prospects and Challenges of Becoming an Indigenous Researcher
17: Hinerauwh?riki 1 : Tapestries of Life for Four M?ori Women in Evaluation
18: Research in Relationship with Humans, the Spirit World, and the Natural World
19: Lens from the "Bottom of the Well"
20: Neyo way in ik issi: A Family Practice of Indigenist Research Informed by Land
21: A Native Papua New Guinea Researcher
22: From Refusal to Getting Involved in Romani Research
23: Interpreting the Journey: Where Words, Stories Formed
24: The Onward Journey
2: The Process that Led Me to Become an Indigenous Researcher
3: I Never Really Had Any Role Models
4: Indigenism, Public Intellectuals, and the Forever Opposed-Or, the Makings of a "Hori Academic"
5: Becoming a Kaupapa M?ori Researcher
6: An African Narrative: The Journey of an Indigenous Social Researcher in South Africa
7: Drawn from the Traditions of Cameroon: Lessons from Twenty-One Years of Practice
8: Indigenous Research with a Cultural Context
9: Being and Becoming an Indigenous Social Researcher
10: Indigenous Researcher's Thoughts: An Experience from Research with Communities in Burkina Faso Using Participatory Methods
11: Becoming an Indigenous Researcher in Interior Alaska: Sharing the Transformative Journey
12: An Aboriginal Health Worker's Research Story
13: Nurturing the Gift of Understanding Different Realities
14: Inuujunga: The Intricacy of Indigenous and Western Epistemologies in the Arctic
15: The Context within: My Journey into Research
16: Prospects and Challenges of Becoming an Indigenous Researcher
17: Hinerauwh?riki 1 : Tapestries of Life for Four M?ori Women in Evaluation
18: Research in Relationship with Humans, the Spirit World, and the Natural World
19: Lens from the "Bottom of the Well"
20: Neyo way in ik issi: A Family Practice of Indigenist Research Informed by Land
21: A Native Papua New Guinea Researcher
22: From Refusal to Getting Involved in Romani Research
23: Interpreting the Journey: Where Words, Stories Formed
24: The Onward Journey