American Indian Researcher Perspectives on Qualitative Inquiry About and Within American Indian Communities

Highlights Conducting research on American Indian (AI) issues may present unique challenges for AI researchers. Here, two AI researchers reflect upon qualitative research focused on AI issues and/or communities. Their reports highlight the need to increase personal and institutional support for AI r...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of community psychology 2019-09, Vol.64 (1-2), p.83-95
Hauptverfasser: Walden, Angela L., West, Amy E.
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container_title American journal of community psychology
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West, Amy E.
description Highlights Conducting research on American Indian (AI) issues may present unique challenges for AI researchers. Here, two AI researchers reflect upon qualitative research focused on AI issues and/or communities. Their reports highlight the need to increase personal and institutional support for AI researchers. It is presumed that Indigenous researchers are optimally positioned to conduct research about or within their own or other Indigenous communities. However, these researchers may still experience challenges, barriers, and distressing events that are important to identify. Qualitative inquiry may be a particularly vulnerable context for Indigenous researchers given the nature of data collection methods and an emphasis on researcher–participant relationships. This paper details the personal reflections of two American Indian (AI) researchers who carried out qualitative research focused on AI issues and/or communities. The first project examined undergraduate students’ opinions of the use of AI imagery in the form of a race‐based university mascot. The second was a study of the mental health needs of AI youth and families in an urban community. Several themes characterized both of their experiences and might be generalizable to others working in these contexts: (a) coping with racism and microaggressions; (b) the role and impact of identity politics; (c) community insider/outsider tension; and (d) managing personal distress associated with the research topics and process. These themes are discussed to illuminate ways that Indigenous researchers, engaged in research on Indigenous topics and/or with Indigenous communities, are challenged and affected by their work.
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects American Indians
Chicago
Community‐based research
Data collection
Female
Health needs
Health Services, Indigenous
Humans
Identity politics
Indians, North American - ethnology
Indians, North American - psychology
Insider/outsider
Interviews as Topic
Male
Mental health
Microaggressions
Native North Americans
Needs Assessment
Politics
Psychological distress
Qualitative Research
Race and ethnicity
Racism
Racism - ethnology
Racism - psychology
Research Personnel
Researchers
Social Identification
Undergraduate students
University‐based research
Urban Population
Vulnerability
title American Indian Researcher Perspectives on Qualitative Inquiry About and Within American Indian Communities
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