TY - JOUR
T1 - Realising decolonising spaces
T2 - relational accountability in research events
AU - Jones, Tod
AU - Dowling, Carol
AU - Porter, Libby
AU - Kickett-Tucker, Cheryl
AU - Cox, Shaphan
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Research events are important places where disciplinary structures and norms are reproduced and challenged. This article uses the authors’ experiences organising a geography research event on decolonising settler cities on Wadjuk Nyungar Country in Perth, Western Australia, to interrogate the transformations that a decolonising ethic demands. Learning with the Indigenous research method of yarning as a decolonising practice, we document and reflect on the persistence a decolonising ethic requires. This project concretely revealed the interconnection between transformation at the micro-level—event conceptualisation, design, placement, and conduct—and building challenges to settler-colonial structures and institutions. We conclude by interrogating the structural barriers for multi-epistemic engagement and learning and propose three principles for non-Indigenous researchers to more fully understand the invitation of being in a relationship with what has always been here: Indigenous sovereignties of law, place, and knowledge.
AB - Research events are important places where disciplinary structures and norms are reproduced and challenged. This article uses the authors’ experiences organising a geography research event on decolonising settler cities on Wadjuk Nyungar Country in Perth, Western Australia, to interrogate the transformations that a decolonising ethic demands. Learning with the Indigenous research method of yarning as a decolonising practice, we document and reflect on the persistence a decolonising ethic requires. This project concretely revealed the interconnection between transformation at the micro-level—event conceptualisation, design, placement, and conduct—and building challenges to settler-colonial structures and institutions. We conclude by interrogating the structural barriers for multi-epistemic engagement and learning and propose three principles for non-Indigenous researchers to more fully understand the invitation of being in a relationship with what has always been here: Indigenous sovereignties of law, place, and knowledge.
KW - decolonisation
KW - relational accountability
KW - research events
KW - settler-colonial university
KW - urban geography
KW - yarning
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147569953&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/11771801221144640
DO - 10.1177/11771801221144640
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85147569953
SN - 1177-1801
VL - 19
SP - 51
EP - 60
JO - AlterNative
JF - AlterNative
IS - 1
ER -