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- Season 1
- EP1 - Intro: Who We Are, Why We're Here & What We're Trying to Do
- EP2- Inspiring Indigenous Scholars: Interview with Dr. Robinson
- EP3- Jimena Chalchi - Health Leadership and Traditional Womens' Medicine in Central and Southern America
- EP4- Creating Safer Spaces - Interview with Harley Eagle
- EP5 -Inspiring Indigenous Scholars: Interview with Marion Erickson
- EP6- Inspiring Indigenous Scholars: Interview with Spencer Greening/La鈥檊oot
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Indigenous Cultural Safety (ICS) & Anti-Racism in the Context of Research
BC health authorities have implemented several cultural safety training opportunities, including in-person training sessions, workshops and webinars. In particular, the Provincial Health Services Authority (PHSA) created and hosts the well-respected San鈥檡as Indigenous Cultural Safety Training program, which offers facilitated online cultural safety training to health service providers, staff and management in all BC health authorities. Cultural safety is no less critical to the practice of research. Several of the same inequities in decision-making power and risk to individuals, families, communities and Nations exist in both spheres. Therefore, it is imperative that we create guidelines and processes that ensure meaningful and culturally safe plans and practices in Indigenous health research relationships and projects.
Clearly, there is a need for post-secondary institutions, Research Ethics Boards (REBs), funders and other research organizations to adopt Indigenous cultural safety (ISC) and anti-racism as a pillar of research ethics, reflecting section 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and Chapter 9 of Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans (TCPS), which prohibits discrimination based on race and affords everyone the right to equal protections and benefit of the law.
As outlined by CIHR (2020), Indigenous health research is based on the right to respectful engagement and equitable opportunities. To this end, CIHR sets out 鈥榞uidelines鈥 to assist researchers and institutions in carrying out ethical and culturally safe research involving Indigenous peoples. However, such guidelines are only 鈥渧oluntarily assumed by the researcher in return for the funding鈥 (CIHR, 2020, np.). Members of BC NEIHR assert that relying on 鈥榲oluntarism鈥 to guidelines is not enough to ensure ethical and culturally safe research. In response, the BC NEIHR has developed an Indigenous Cultural Safety in Research (ICSR) Framework.