Overview
This research space can be described as an opportunity to explore trust, balance, respect, and understanding in intercultural relationships between indigenous and non-indigenous peoples in Canada, with an overall aim of fostering new, responsible, reciprocal and respectful relationships in place of old conflicts. Preliminary research suggests that social innovations initiated and led by Indigenous peoples prioritize holistic health and wellbeing and have a strong link to sustainability and social justice agendas. Future research directions will focus on whether social innovation could (or should) be interpreted from a critical indigenist lens, with applications for innovations in resource and environmental management in Canada and abroad.
Our working definition: Indigenous innovations are a unique type of social innovation continually informed by the application of indigenous knowledge to promote the resurgence of Indigenous knowledge and practices, as guided by the wisdom of the ancestors.
Research questions
- How are the processes of social innovation altered in an Indigenous context? This involves questions about the choices facing indigenous communities about whether to integrate into mainstream Canadian society or to try to create an 'Indigenous modernity'.
- Having this research funded by theÌýSuncor Energy Foundation brings up issues inherent to university-community-private partnerships for funding research.
- How do you promote sustainability in a context of unsustainable economic activity? Challenges involve the potential for moral hazard in partnering with companies involved in clearly unsustainable activities.Ìý
- Is there common ground between social innovation and critical indigenist methodologies?
Recent activities
Kinomaagwinan maamwaye: exploring indigenist methodologies and social innovation
This one-day symposium brought together Shawn Wilson and Frances Westley, leading experts in the fields of indigenist methodologies and social innovation, respectively, to explore the concept of indigenist innovation. Held at the À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Aboriginal Education Centre, the symposium was attended by graduate and undergraduate students, faculty, and administrators with the intent to open a long-term and intercultural dialogue on the opportunities and barriers to advancing indigenist research and innovation at the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ.
Key questions discussed at the event include:
1. Ìý Ìý What is an indigenist research paradigm?
2. Ìý Ìý What is social innovation?
3. Ìý Ìý Can we have indigenist innovation?
4. Ìý ÌýCan/should social innovation be interpreted using an indigenist paradigm?
5. Ìý ÌýDoes social innovation have useful tools and strategies for fostering change in Indigenous communities?
6. Ìý Ìý What are the opportunities and barriers to advancing change-oriented critical indigenist research at the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ?
Projects
Anishanaabe maamwaye aki kiigayewin (AMAK):ÌýThis research aims toÌýexplore models of, and approaches to, mine restoration and rehabilitation that integrate, in aÌýmeaningful way, traditional Indigenous knowledge and practice that helps to foster decolonizationÌýand promote constructive intercultural relationships, especially Indigenous-corporate relations in theÌýmining industry.
Publications
McCarthy DDP, Millen M, Boyden M, Alexiuk A, Whitelaw G, Viswanathan L, Westley F.ÌýÌýUnder Review. ÌýA first nations-led social innovation:Ìýa moose, a gold mining company and a policy window. Ecology and Society.
Alexiuk E,ÌýMcCarthy DDP, King C, Macbeth J, Whitelaw GS, Viswanathan L. ÌýUnder Review. ÌýA critical indigenist approach to social innovation: building municipal-indigenous relations in Southern Ontario, Canada. Ecology and Society. (manuscript under review)
Alexiuk, E. (2013). Exploring the common ground between social innovation and Indigenous resurgence: two critical indigenist case studies in indigenous innovation in Ontario, Canada. Masters Thesis, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ: À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ, Ontario, Canada.Ìý