加拿大一所学院为促进和解所采取的途径以及与土著人民建立新的和解参与计划

Randy C Battochio, Andrea Dokis, Charlene Restoule, Paige Restoule, Natasha Mayer, Mallory Leduc, Tana Roberts
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在全加拿大范围内,正在努力缩小过去遭受文化种族灭绝、压迫和剥削的土著人民在健康和福利方面存在的差距。这篇文章的目的是为加拿大大学和研究所(CICan)的成员提供一个参与和解的拟议计划,目的是通过社会创新、培训和应用研究促进土著社区的参与。拟议的项目通过位于安大略省北部的博尔萨塔尔学院和多基斯第一民族之间建立的关系来举例说明。拟议的和解参与计划包括两个部分,鼓励CICan成员在其他可能的非殖民化方法中,利用批判性土著方法论的原则来重视和突出当地土著的声音。第一个流程将包括网络活动,以建立关系,了解酋长和理事会的愿景,并在土著社区内寻求能力建设的机会。第二流将以项目为基础,以便可以获得资本成本和人力资源来完成每个项目。虽然提出新计划很重要,但本文也可以用来举例说明加拿大大学和理工学院如何在与土著社区接触时采用非殖民化方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pathways Taken By One Canadian College to Advance Reconciliation and the Creation of a New Reconciliation Engagement Program with Indigenous Peoples
Canada-wide efforts are being made to close the gaps that exist in the health and wellness of Indigenous Peoples besieged by a past of cultural genocide, oppression, and exploitation. The purpose of this essay is to provide members of Colleges and Institutes of Canada (CICan) access to a proposed program to engage in reconciliation, with the objective of facilitating Indigenous community engagement through social innovation, training, and applied research. The proposed program is exemplified through the relationship built between Collège Boréal and Dokis First Nation located in northern Ontario. The proposed Reconciliation Engagement Program consists of two streams that encourage CICan members to utilize, among other possible decolonizing methods, the tenets of a Critical Indigenous Methodology to value and foreground local Indigenous voices. The first stream would consist of networking activities to establish relationships, understand Chief and Council’s vision, and seek opportunities for capacity building within an Indigenous community. The second stream would be project-based so that capital costs and human resources can be accessed to complete each project. While proposing the new program is important, the present essay can also be used to exemplify how Canadian colleges and polytechnics can adopt a decolonizing approach during their engagement with Indigenous communities. 
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