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Community engagement

There is a wide range of existing relationships between Dalhousie researchers and Indigenous communities across Turtle Island, including researchers who are members of the communities with whom they are working. 

Research involving Indigenous communities

For anyone interested in engaging in Indigenous research, it is critical to have guidance and agreement from appropriate representatives in the traditional territories where the research is concerned.

First Nation, Métis, and Inuit governments, as well as many Indigenous communities and organizations, often have formal channels and/or protocols for potential research partnerships. It is essential for the researcher to have knowledge and awareness regarding the specific community’s culture, language, governance structure, and research priorities before initiating research. Additionally, all outreach activities with prospective community and organizational partners should be documented so that the information can be included in a community engagement plan and report. 

Responsible engagement

Researchers must seek engagement with the relevant Indigenous Community when the research is likely to impact their welfare. 

The following conditions require community engagement, among others:

  • research conducted on First Nations, Inuit or Métis lands;

  • recruitment criteria that include Indigenous identity as a factor for the entire study or for a subgroup in the study;

  • research that seeks input from participants regarding a community's cultural heritage, artefacts, traditional knowledge or unique characteristics;

  • research in which Indigenous identity or membership in an Indigenous community is used as a variable for the purpose of analysis of the research data; and

  • interpretation of research results that will refer to Indigenous communities, peoples, language, history or culture.

Tri-Council Policy Statement (TCPS2), Chapter 9, Article 9.2 provides examples of the nature and extent of community engagement.

Regional organizations

Respect for community customs and codes of practice

Researchers should honour and respect that Indigenous communities and organizations require time to engage in their own governance and cultural processes.

If communities or organizations do not have specific engagement protocols and processes in place, depending on the community’s priorities, there may be opportunities to integrate capacity building into research proposals. See TCPS 2, Chapter 9, Article 9.8 for more information about Respect for Community Customs and Codes of Practice.

If the community partner or organization identifies that capacity building is an area of interest for them, provisions to address this in the research proposal is highly encouraged. The Canada Research Coordinating Committee (CRCC) along with the federal research granting agencies developed a strategic plan, Setting new directions to support Indigenous research and research training in Canada 2019-2022. This document provides an overview of ways researchers can contribute to capacity building and supporting Indigenous community research priorities.

Community engagement resources

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