Drs. Deondre & Max’s book club on Indigenous methodologies
We’ve been engaging in a reading experiment called #Collabrary (Collaborative Library) where we aim to read research texts with generosity, humility, and accountability. Mostly we’ve been posting our reading on Twitter, but now we’ll be talking to one another about reading two shared texts on Indigenous methodologies. In this video, we’ll be reading: Cannella, Gaile S., and Kathryn D. Manuelito. “Feminisms from unthought locations: Indigenous worldviews, marginalized feminisms, and revisioning an anticolonial social science.” Handbook of critical and indigenous methodologies (2008): 45-59.
Featured Resources
Carolina Alonso Berajano
2024 |
This lecture on decolonizing ethnography methods is part of the NSF-funded International Cultural Anthropology Methods (CAMP) Program, a free-to-all public anthropology methods curriculum (https://methods4all.org/camp-international/). See this link for a complete list of the curriculum and suggested readings to accompany each lecture.
Maria Giannacopoulos, Border Criminologies
2024 | Australia
Chapter discussed in the interview: Giannacopoulos M, 2022, ‘Nomocide or the Nonperformativity of Colonial Law’, in Performance, Resistance and Refugees, Taylor & Francis, pp. 155 – 166, http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003142782…
Big Anxiety Research Centre
2023 | Australia, Canada
How can we frame suicide research and prevention differently? This panel brings together suicide experts and advocates to discuss the sociocultural, political, and environmental dimensions of suicide. The speakers will share key learnings from research and advocacy and reflect on how we can draw from Indigenous knowledge and scholarship to…
Black Dog Institute
2023 | Australia, United States, Canada, Aotearoa New Zealand
Six Indigenous global leaders in mental health and wellbeing from four different countries held a free two-hour webinar as part of Black Dog Institute’s Summit on Self-Harm, held in November 2022. As part of the webinar, each shared their experiences of walking in two worlds and of navigating mental health…
Featured Resources
Carolina Alonso Berajano
2024 |
This lecture on decolonizing ethnography methods is part of the NSF-funded International Cultural Anthropology Methods (CAMP) Program, a free-to-all public anthropology methods curriculum (https://methods4all.org/camp-international/). See this link for a complete list of the curriculum and suggested readings to accompany each lecture.
Maria Giannacopoulos, Border Criminologies
2024 | Australia
Chapter discussed in the interview: Giannacopoulos M, 2022, ‘Nomocide or the Nonperformativity of Colonial Law’, in Performance, Resistance and Refugees, Taylor & Francis, pp. 155 – 166, http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003142782…
Big Anxiety Research Centre
2023 | Australia, Canada
How can we frame suicide research and prevention differently? This panel brings together suicide experts and advocates to discuss the sociocultural, political, and environmental dimensions of suicide. The speakers will share key learnings from research and advocacy and reflect on how we can draw from Indigenous knowledge and scholarship to…
Black Dog Institute
2023 | Australia, United States, Canada, Aotearoa New Zealand
Six Indigenous global leaders in mental health and wellbeing from four different countries held a free two-hour webinar as part of Black Dog Institute’s Summit on Self-Harm, held in November 2022. As part of the webinar, each shared their experiences of walking in two worlds and of navigating mental health…