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- Title
(DE)COLONIZING RESEARCH SERVICES.
- Authors
Hillier, Sean; Phipps, David; Brown, Celia Haig
- Abstract
The 2015 Calls to Action from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) prompted universities to consider Indigenization. Subsequently, in recognition of the need for a prior step, decolonizing became the focus. At York University (Toronto, Canada), while faculty hiring policies and curriculum development addressed some aspects of the calls, there was limited focus on staff involvement. David Phipps, then Executive Director of the Office of Research Services within the Division of the Vice-President Research and Innovation approached Associate Vice-President Research Celia Haig-Brown with the original focus, "What about Indigenizing the Office of Research Services?" Our work began. "How do research administration practices/polices create (or serve as barriers to) an enabling environment for Indigenous research?" became the driving question. Building on the university's commitment to Indigenous Futurities as a research opportunity in our Strategic Research Plan1, the Journal of Research Administration's special edition on equity, diversity and inclusion provides a perfect site to reflect on our work and, we hope, provoke further discussion of the potential for decolonizing research services in other institutions of higher education. We begin this reflection and provocation in the article title. We bracket the (de) in the word decolonizing in the title to indicate our understanding of the complexity of a university, based as it is in a colonizing model, engaging in decolonizing work.
- Subjects
YORK University (Toronto, Ont.); TRUTH &; Reconciliation Canada; UNIVERSITIES &; colleges; CURRICULUM planning; DECOLONIZATION; DIVERSITY in education
- Publication
Journal of Research Administration, 2023, Vol 54, Issue 2, p83
- ISSN
1539-1590
- Publication type
Article