Index

Indigenous Research Ethics: Claiming Research Sovereignty Beyond Deficit and the Colonial Legacy

ISBN: 978-1-78769-390-6, eISBN: 978-1-78769-389-0

ISSN: 2398-6018

Publication date: 19 October 2020

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2020), "Index", George, L., Tauri, J. and MacDonald, L.T.A.o.T. (Ed.) Indigenous Research Ethics: Claiming Research Sovereignty Beyond Deficit and the Colonial Legacy (Advances in Research Ethics and Integrity, Vol. 6), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 293-302. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2398-601820200000006024

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020 Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate end notes.

Aboriginal

art
, 238

health and well-being
, 143

social life
, 142

worldview
, 242n1

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities in Genome Research
, 110

consent
, 119–121

listening
, 117–119

moral obligation
, 114–116

NCIG
, 111–113

NCIG’s outreach
, 113–114

outreach and engagement
, 120

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner (ATSISJC)
, 45

Aboriginal Women in Prison
, 31–33

Academia
, 270n2

Academic(s)
, 164

decisionmakers’ exoticising gaze
, 269

decolonization
, 263–264

enriching academic environment
, 215

ethical approval process
, 266

imperialism
, 263–264, 266

neo-colonialism and exoticising
, 264–266

non-indigenous mentor perspective
, 269–271

ACT Torres Strait Islander Dance Troupe
, 180

Adam Page
, 231, 234n9

Aesthetics
, 242

Ailan dance (see Secular dance)

AKA avoiding theft
, 215–216

American educationalist
, 197

Ancestor
, 127

Anthropology
, 55, 219

Anti-hierarchial
, 215

Aotearoa New Zealand
, 99, 104, 106, 191, 172-173, 195–196, 252, 264

cultural terrain
, 200

pre-ethics fieldwork in
, 278–281

Art
, 239

Articulation
, 228

Astronomy
, 164

Audiences
, 183, 242

Audio sonification
, 234n3

Australian Anthropology Society conference in Adelaide
, 241

Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS)
, 42

Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC)
, 110

Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS)
, 7, 44

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW)
, 144

Australian National University (ANU)
, 111

Australian National University Act 1991, The
, 112

Australian Research Council (ARC)
, 44

Authority
, 74

Autoethnographic accounts
, 262

Autoethnography and ethics
, 84

as decolonisation
, 89–90

exploring
, 86–88

location, location, location
, 86

minding gaps
, 85

in practice
, 88–89

reflexivity
, 85–86

sovereign pursuits
, 84–85

stories
, 90–91

storytelling
, 91–92

Balanda audiences
, 242

Beizam Kab
, 183

Big data
, 69

Black peoples relationship
, 210

Board’s governance framework
, 113

Caldwell lily (Proiphys amboinensis)
, 180

Capitalism
, 214

Celestial knowledge
, 166–167

Central Australian Human Research Ethics Committee (CAHREC)
, 30

Ceremonial dance
, 183–184

Close the Gap 2019
, 36n7

Cognitive capacity
, 270

Collaboration
, 219–220, 224, 238, 255, 276

Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH)
, 142

Collaborative research/composition/performance process
, 224

Collective Benefit
, 74

Collective benefit, Authority to control, Responsibility and Ethics (CARE)
, 72

Colonial administrators and collectors
, 252

Colonial dispossession
, 111

Colonialism
, 4, 210, 212, 214

Colonisation
, 137, 142, 144–145, 160n1, 165, 169, 193–194

Commitment to Te Tiriti o Waitangi
, 215

Community engagement
, 155–156

Community Reference Group (CRG)
, 146

Composition
, 227

Confront Pākehā defensiveness
, 212–213

Connectedness with family and friends
, 157

Consent
, 119–121

Constitutes knowledge and decides
, 193–195

Constructive conflict
, 215

Convergence indigenous methodology
, 22

Cosmology
, 192, 242n1

Criminal justice
, 42, 44, 48–49

Criminology
, 42, 44, 48–49

Cross-cultural artistic collaboration
, 277

Cross-cultural collaboration
, 248

Cross-cultural exchange
, 178

Cross-cultural perspectives
, 193

Crown Research Institute (CRI)
, 58, 195

Cultural, social, and emotional well-being (CSEWB)
, 142–143

colonisation and social determinants
, 144–145

determinants
, 143

methodology
, 148–152

programme
, 10, 145–148

SMSC
, 158–159

thematic analysis of workshop outcomes
, 152–157

Cultural/culture
, 152–154, 180–182

heritage
, 110, 112, 116

protocols
, 184, 209, 277

racism
, 145

revitalisation
, 167

Cutting-edge musical technologies
, 224

Data

data-gathering phase
, 170

governance
, 68, 71

risks and harms
, 69–70

Decision-makers
, 268

Decolonised/decolonising/decolonisation
, 21, 87, 210, 270n2

academia
, 263

autoethnography as
, 89–90

methodologies
, 4, 21–22, 43

principles for research ethics reviews
, 21–23

relationships
, 209–212

research
, 209–212

of research
, 44

solidarity
, 265

Decolonising Māori-Pākehā research collaborations

AKA avoiding theft
, 215–216

confront Pākehā defensiveness
, 212–213

Kaupapa Māori priorities
, 213–215

rethinking place of scholarly critique
, 216–217

space for indigenous designs for future
, 219–220

unmask white supremacy and question status quo
, 212

whiteness shapes oppressions
, 217–219

Deep listening
, 285–286

Deeper deep listening
, 276, 286–287

Descendants of settlers in New Zealand
, 208

Dhäkay-ŋänhawuy rom (law of feelings)
, 242

Diligence
, 172

Discrimination
, 111

Disparity, deprivation, disadvantage, dysfunction and difference (5Ds)
, 70

Distinction
, 169

Diverse society
, 193

Diversity
, 190–191

Dreaming
, 142

Education (Update) Amendment Act (2017)
, 190–191

Education system
, 191

Educational advancement
, 191–192

Empathetic flexibility
, 215

Empowerment
, 146, 152–153, 167

Enlivening effects
, 240

Environmental planning and engagement
, 254

Environmental sustainability
, 195

Epistemological revolution
, 194

Epistemologies
, 192–193

in assessing ethics
, 77–78

European
, 262

Indigenous
, 270–271

Ethical conduct in indigenous research

decolonising principles for research ethics reviews
, 21–23

human research codes of ethics
, 23–25

indigenous ethical guidelines, processes and committees
, 25–31

Indigenous ethical processes
, 31–34

reproduction of deficit in ethics
, 20–21

Ethics
, 129

autoethnography and
, 84–92

of collaboration
, 12

ethical research
, 22

Etuaptmumk
, 84

European epistemologies and research tools
, 262

European settlers in New Zealand
, 208

European Union (EU)
, 70

European-American norms
, 197

‘Exotic’ Indigenous topics
, 265

Exoticising
, 262

Feminist principles
, 214

First Nations peoples
, 179–180

Food technology
, 164

Foreign’ technologies
, 239

Formulism
, 196

Free, prior and informed consent (FPIC)
, 45–47, 110, 120, 197

Gay
, 197

Gerib Sik Torres Strait Islander Corporation
, 180

Global Indigenous Data Alliance (GIDA)
, 72

Government objectives
, 192–193

Group-level harm, potential for
, 75–77

Guardianship
, 74

Hauora Tangata
, 170

Hauora/oranga
, 195

Havasupai tribal nation in Arizona
, 70

He Awa Whiria (Braided Rivers)
, 198

Health
, 128, 154

health-care decision-makers
, 171

Health and Disability Ethics Committees (HDECs)
, 97

Health Research Council (HRC)
, 58

Health Research Council Ethics Committee (HRCEC)
, 97

Hegemonic belittling
, 217

Hohou te rongo
, 133

HRC Funding
, 62

Human Ethics Committee (HEC)
, 97, 101

Human Ethics Guidelines document
, 9

Human research codes of ethics
, 23–25

Human research ethics committees (HRECs)
, 23, 25, 28

Human rights
, 110

Imagined geography
, 264

Implementing indigenous research ethics at interface

establishment of Whakauae research
, 165–167

implementing Tikanga
, 169–172

indigenous research ethics at interface
, 172–173

origins of iwi-owned research centre
, 165–166

Tikanga–indigenous research ethics
, 167–168

Imposter syndrome
, 217–218

Improvisation
, 224

Inclusion
, 191, 195, 199, 211

Independence
, 47

Indigenous Australian peoples

“free, prior and informed consent” ethical principle
, 45–47

gaps in NHRMC & AIATSIS ethical guidelines
, 42–44

indigenous empowerment and self-determination
, 48–49

for the benefit of Indigenous peoples
, 47–48

Indigenous communities
, 4, 20–22, 24–27, 35, 70

Indigenous Criminology
, 268

Indigenous criminology methodology
, 268

Indigenous data
, 68–69

ethical use of
, 73

misuse of
, 70–71

Indigenous data sovereignty (IDS)
, 68, 71–72

and secondary use of data
, 73–75

Indigenous designs for future, space for
, 219–220

Indigenous empowerment
, 48–49

Indigenous epistemologies
, 270–271

in research ethics
, 195–198

Indigenous ethical guidelines, processes and committees
, 25

ethical guidelines and principles
, 26–28

indigenous HRECs
, 28–29

indigenous-owned ethics processes
, 29–31

Indigenous ethical processes
, 31

aboriginal Women in Prison
, 31–33

Tangentyere Council Research Hub
, 33–34

Indigenous innovation
, 195

Indigenous knowledge
, 193–194

Indigenous knowledgemakers
, 262, 269, 271

Indigenous knowledges
, 3, 5, 10, 13, 211

Indigenous peoples
, 45, 110, 164, 167, 210

of New Zealand
, 208

relationship
, 210

Indigenous research
, 84–86, 88, 92

methodologies
, 22, 214

sovereignty
, 3–4

Indigenous research ethics
, 5–6, 9–11, 20, 35, 68, 71

challenges of mainstream institutions
, 4–5, 7–9

indigenous research sovereignty
, 3–4

indigenous/non-indigenous partnerships
, 6, 11–14

at interface
, 172–173

Indigenous scholars
, 164, 208

and communities
, 276

Indigenous scholarship implicitly
, 192–193

Indigenous Standpoint Theory (IST)
, 147, 150

Indigenous sub-population
, 263

Indigenous universities
, 264

Individualism
, 196

Inequity, responding ethically to
, 198–199

Informed decision-making
, 45

Innovation
, 84

Institutional ethics processes
, 20

Institutional research
, 36n2

Institutional researcher
, 36n2

Institutional-level ethics committee (IEC)
, 97

Integrated data infrastructure (IDI)
, 75

Integrity
, 172, 253

Intergenerational impoverishment
, 210

Intergenerational memory
, 132

Iwi-owned research centre origins
, 165

Te Whakauae Tamatea goals and objectives
, 166

Iwi’s first research strategy
, 166

James Henare Māori Research Centre (JHMRC)
, 54–56, 62

Kab Kar (dance)
, 185

Kaikaranga
, 282

Kaitiakitanga
, 74, 96

Kala Kalaw Ya (language)
, 181

Kala Lagaw Ya (language)
, 181

Kanohi ki te kanohi interaction
, 199

Karakia (prayers)
, 69

interaction
, 199

Karanga (summoning call)
, 277

Kaumātua Advisory Group
, 170

Kaumātua Well-being
, 62

Kaupapa
, 249

Kaupapa Māori
, 220n2, 286n4

approaches
, 4

ethics
, 214

philosophy
, 164–165

priorities
, 213–215

Kaupapa Māori research
, 130, 280

organization
, 286

philosophy
, 167

protocols
, 279

Kāwanatanga
, 96

Kawrareg (language)
, 181

Kaylynn Zaro’s totem
, 179

Kebi Paser

author standpoints
, 178–180

importance of culture
, 180–182

linking dance and country
, 182–185

Keeping on Track II document
, 21

Kei Tua O Te Arai

Adam Page
, 231

articulation
, 228

conversational flow
, 227

cross-blown flute
, 225

digital device
, 232

Horo and Mayall performing ‘Kei Tua o te Arai’
, 233

Horo and Mayall performing ‘Te Aho Mai o Kotiritiri’
, 232

imagination
, 232

large traditional flute
, 227

learning/knowledge
, 226

Mayall and Horo performing ‘Kia Eke Panuku’
, 233

music
, 231

musical instrumentation
, 229

New Zealand
, 230

process work
, 224

Kia Eke Panuku
, 225

Kimberlé Crenshaw’s seminal theory
, 217–218

Kimiora
, 56

Kirikiriroa (City)
, 249

Knowledge
, 190, 193–195, 226

framework
, 200

knowledge-based economy
, 193

production
, 57

Kokem Le
, 183

Kolap
, 182

Kotahitanga
, 74, 96

Kulkalgaw Ya (language)
, 181

Law of feelings
, 241–244

Leadership
, 55

Learning
, 226

Life skills
, 157

Linking dance and country
, 182–185

Listening
, 35

Long-standing disparity
, 199

Lower jaw knowledge
, 130

Mahi tahi
, 96

Makereti
, 191

Mana whenua
, 254

Manaaki Tangata
, 171

Manaakitanga
, 74, 211, 215, 249

Māori
, 164

anthropologist
, 276

data
, 68–69, 73

education
, 190

educational success
, 192–193

ethical issues
, 199

knowledge
, 190, 192

language
, 194

philosophy
, 193–194

research
, 138

research ethics
, 196

science
, 60

theory
, 193–194

Māori data sovereignty (MDS)
, 68, 71–72

Māori-Pākehā

collaborations
, 208, 214

relations
, 209

Marginalisation
, 111

Markers for New Zealand’s unique cultural terrain
, 200

Market Equity
, 33

Mātauranga
, 57, 171–172, 195

Mātauranga Māori
, 191, 193

Matchbox tree (Entada phaseoloides)
, 182

MBIE Endeavour Funding
, 62

Mentor decolonising research
, 262

Meriam identity
, 182

Meriam Kab (see Ceremonial dance)

Meriam Le knowledge
, 178

Meriam Mir (language)
, 181

Mimetic aesthetic dimension
, 242 n3

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE)
, 57, 195

Ministry of Research, Science and Technology (MoRST)
, 57

Miyarrka Media translate
, 238

Mobile phones
, 238

scholars
, 239

Mōteatea (chants)
, 69

Mount Taranaki
, 276–277

Murray Island dance
, 178

Music
, 231

musical conversation
, 225

musicians/collaborators/researchers
, 224

Musicking
, 284–285

Mythology
, 192

National Aboriginal and Islander Health Organisation (NAIHO)
, 26

National Centre for Indigenous Genomics (NCIG)
, 9, 111–113

outreach
, 113–117

National Centre for Indigenous Genomics Statute 2016, The
, 112

National Empowerment Project (NEP)
, 10, 145

National Film & Sound Archive Australia (NFSAA)
, 110

National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
, 7, 21, 26–28, 44, 115, 151

National Science Challenge Ageing Well Funding
, 62

Negotiated Spaces model
, 198

Neo-colonial academic decision-makers
, 271

Neo-colonial academic exoticising
, 262, 265–266

from academic non-indigenous mentor perspective
, 269–271

from postgraduate knowledgemaker perspective
, 266–269

Neo-colonial contexts
, 262

Neo-colonial exoticising

assumptions
, 268

gaze
, 269

Neo-colonialism
, 263

Neoliberalism
, 214

New research
, 36n1

New Zealand

anthropology
, 276

Human Rights Commission
, 199

New Zealand-based research
, 191

society
, 254

unique cultural terrain
, 200

Ngā manu a Rehua
, 135

Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga (NPM)
, 194

funding
, 62

Ngai Tumapuhiarangi tohunga
, 131

Ngākau
, 140n3

Ngākau Tapatahi me te Aurere
, 172

Ngāti Hauiti
, 165

research strategy
, 165–166

Ngāti Wairere pā
, 251

Noel Zaro
, 179

Non-Indigenous

academic mentors
, 262

mentor
, 266

people
, 179–180

researchers
, 276

scholars
, 265

sub-population
, 263

Normalising colonialism
, 262

Obligations
, 74

Oceanography
, 164

‘One size fits all’ approach
, 77

Orientalism
, 263

Pākehā collaborators
, 212

Pākehā defensiveness
, 212–213

Pākehā paralysis
, 283

Pākehā partners in research process
, 11–12

Pākehā vulnerability
, 208

Papatuanuku
, 131–132

Parihaka

carpeted space at
, 286–287

strangers at
, 276–278

Parihaka Grieving by New Zealand poet
, 281

Participation
, 99

Participatory Action Research approach (PAR approach)
, 147–148, 150–151, 214

Participatory consciousness
, 284

Partnership
, 99

Partnership approaches
, 21

Personal strengths
, 156–157

Phone & Spear
, 241

Pluriversity
, 262

Positivist scientific methods
, 47

Post-and neo-colonial local contexts
, 263

Post-colonial and neo-colonial contexts
, 270n1

Postgraduate knowledgemaker
, 262, 266–269

Poverty
, 111

Practice
, 99

Pre-ethics
, 3, 13

carpeted space at Parihaka
, 286–287

deeper listening in
, 284–286

entering Soniferous Space
, 281–284

fieldwork in Aotearoa New Zealand
, 278–281

research
, 276

strangers at Parihaka
, 276–278

Privacy, Human Rights, and Ethics framework (PHRaE framework)
, 77

Professional and self-development
, 155

Professionalism
, 172

Protection
, 99

principle of the Treaty of Waitangi
, 102

Provenance, Opportunity and Utility framework (POU framework)
, 77

Public health
, 164

Racism
, 111, 254

Rain totem
, 179

Rangahau
, 129

Rangahau Hauora Māori investment stream
, 173

Rangatiratanga
, 74, 96, 169

Rangatiratanga ō te Kai me te Rongoā
, 62

Rangatiratanga o te Wai
, 62

Ranginui
, 131–132

Reciprocity
, 74

Reference genome
, 117

Reflexive practice
, 85

Reflexivity
, 85–86

Relational research
, 86

Relationships
, 74

Religion
, 192

Repetition
, 184

Research (see also Indigenous research; Tupuna-informed research)
, 43

collaboration
, 8, 11–12

decolonisation of
, 44

institutional
, 36n2

relationships
, 276

Whakauae
, 165–167

Research ethics, indigenous epistemologies in
, 195–198

Research Ethics Boards (REBs)
, 8, 84

Research partnership

Aotearoa New Zealand
, 252

Kirikiriroa
, 249

Ngāti Wairere pā
, 251

Racism
, 254

RMA
, 254

Takarangi
, 248

Tikanga Māori
, 250

Resource Management Act (RMA)
, 254

Responding ethically to inequity
, 198–199

Revealing patterns of cultural influences on discourses of research ethics

government objectives and Māori educational success
, 192–193

indigenous epistemologies in research ethics
, 195–198

knowledge
, 193–195

markers for New Zealand’s unique cultural terrain
, 200

responding ethically to inequity
, 198–199

traditional Māori developmental model of educational advancement
, 191–192

Risk-Need-Responsivity model (RNR model)
, 47

Scholarly critique
, 216–217

Scholars
, 164

Secular dance
, 183

Self-as-science
, 84

Self-belief
, 215

Self-determination
, 48–49, 142, 149, 167, 169

Self-doubt
, 217–218

Self-in-science
, 84

Self-reflexivity
, 178–179

Semi-structured interviews
, 267

Separatism
, 216

Settler-colonial states
, 270n1

Settler-colonialism
, 208

Shared space
, 248

Sharing feelings
, 242

Sista2sista
, 31–33

Social and Cultural Resilience and Emotional wellbeing of Aboriginal Mothers project (SCREAM project)
, 31–33

Social and emotional well-being (SEWB)
, 142–143

Social determinants
, 144–145

Social Policy Evaluation and Research Unit (SUPERU)
, 198

Social renewal
, 238

Social science scholars
, 218

Society and cultural knowledge
, 191

Socio-academic relationships
, 262

‘Soft-funded’ iwi-owned and mandated research entity
, 167

Solar Circuit Aotearoa New Zealand (SCANZ)
, 275

Soniferous Space
, 281–284

Sovereignty
, 169

Space for indigenous designs for future
, 219–220

Spirituality
, 152–154

Stakeholders
, 171

Statement of Intent (20182019)
, 191–192

Stolen Generations
, 142

Stories of most significant change (SMSC)
, 148, 152, 158–159

Storytelling
, 91–92

Struggle against neo-colonial academic exoticising in postgraduate research

academic imperialism and academic decolonization
, 263–264

academic neo-colonialism and exoticising
, 264–266

academic non-indigenous mentor perspective
, 269–271

neo-colonial academic exoticising from postgraduate knowledgemaker perspective
, 266–269

Students
, 193

Suicide prevention
, 145

Supervision
, 265–266

Supervisor-supervisee
, 208

Sustainability
, 215

Tahere-tikitiki
, 56

Taheretikitiki II
, 251

Taiao
, 195

Tall poppy syndrome
, 254

Tamatea Pōkai Whenua
, 166

Tangentyere Council Research Hub
, 33–34

Taonga puoro
, 224

Taonga tuku iho
, 200

Tapu
, 200

Te Aho Mai o Kotiritiri
, 227

Te Ara Tika framework
, 73

Te Ara Tika Guidelines for Māori Research Ethics
, 199

Te Awa Tipua
, 59

Te Hononga
, 62

Te Maru o Ruahine Trust (TMoRT)
, 165

Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Hauiti
, 166–167

Te Tiriti o Waitangi
, 252

Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato
, 252

Terrestrial knowledge
, 166–167

Tertiary education
, 200–201

Tertiary Education Commission
, 194

Tertiary Education Strategy
, 192

Threshold concern
, 178

Tikanga
, 69, 167–169, 200

Hauora Tangata
, 170

Manaaki Tangata
, 171

Mātauranga
, 171–172

Ngākau Tapatahi me te Aurere
, 172

Rangatiratanga
, 169

Tikanga Māori
, 250, 254

processes
, 173

Time-consuming and repetitive process
, 173

Tino rangatiratanga
, 200

Tohunga
, 139n2

Tokenism
, 216

Tombstone opening
, 187n1

Torres Strait Islanders
, 178

dance
, 178

Torres Strait Islands
, 182–183

Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in (TH)
, 267

Traditional Māori developmental model of educational advancement
, 191–192

Traditions
, 192

Treaty of Waitangi
, 96

Tri-Council Policy Statement (TCPS2)
, 8

Tri-Council Policy Statement for Research Involving Humans (TCPS)
, 85

Tūpuna Awa
, 59

Tupuna teachings
, 127–129

Tupuna-informed research
, 130

healing and medicines
, 135

power of carrying intergenerational memory from creation
, 131–132

power of honouring sanctity of words
, 133

power of knowing
, 130–131

power of knowing everything returns to point of balance
, 137–138

power of knowing nothing permanent
, 137

power of knowing our place in creation, through time/place
, 136–137

power of not being centre of knowing
, 134–135

UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
, 110

United Nations declaration on rights of indigenous peoples
, 196–197

Universalism
, 196–197

Universality
, 47

Universities Australia (UA)
, 44

University ethics processes
, 195

University of Technology Sydney (UTS)
, 29

University of Western Australia (UWA)
, 10, 145

Unmask white supremacy and question status quo
, 212

Uses of Neo-liberalism, The (Ferguson)
, 60–61

Vice Chancellors Strategic Development Funding
, 62

Victoria University of Wellington (VUW)
, 96

Victoria University of Wellington’s Human Ethics Committee (VUW-HEC)
, 9, 96

engaging with treaty question
, 101–103

Ko Wai Au
, 103–105

motivations for
, 97–98

shifting place of treaty question
, 100–101

treaty in policy
, 98–100

Vision and mission reflect
, 167

Vision Mātauranga policy (VM policy)
, 56–58, 195

neoliberal twist
, 60–61

new knowledge frontier
, 61–62

Vulnerability
, 4, 215

Waiata (song)
, 69

Waminda–South Coast Women’s Health & Welfare Aboriginal Corporation
, 30

Wanderers
, 256

Wayfarers
, 256

Well-being
, 132, 134–135

Western anthropologists
, 264

Western Australian Aboriginal Child Health Survey (WAACHS)
, 151

Western knowledge
, 190

Western scientists
, 164

Western social sciences
, 270–271

Whai wāhi
, 96

Whakapapa (genealogies, histories)
, 69, 74, 280

Whakarewarewa
, 201n1

Whakataukī (proverbial sayings)
, 69

Whakauae research
, 165–167

Whakauae research services (WRS)
, 165–166

Whanaungatanga
, 74, 211, 215

Whiteness shapes oppressions
, 217–219

Wind totem
, 179

Yolngu concepts
, 276

Yolngu social aesthetics
, 238

Yolŋu phone-made media
, 238

Yuta anthropology
, 12, 26, 237

law of feelings
, 241–244

Yolŋu remix
, 239

Zogo
, 185

Zogo Spirit
, 183

Zoology
, 164

Prelims
Chapter 1: An Introduction to Indigenous Research Ethics
Part I: Challenges of Mainstream Institutions
Chapter 2: Ethical Conduct in Indigenous Research: It’s Just Good Manners
Chapter 3: Developing Ethical Standards in Criminology and Criminal Justice Research: A Focus on Indigenous Australian Peoples
Chapter 4: Vision Mātauranga, Eclectic Anthropology and the Fading Empire
Chapter 5: Data Ethics and Data Governance from A Māori World View
Chapter 6: Autoethnography and Ethics: Sovereignty, Self-Determination, and Strategies
Chapter 7: Engaging With ‘That Treaty Question’ on a University Ethics Committee in Aotearoa New Zealand
Chapter 8: The Practice of Engaging Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities in Genome Research
Part II: Indigenous Research
Chapter 9: I Try to Keep Quiet but My Ancestors don’t Let Me
Chapter 10: ‘I Was Hurt, But Now I Am Strong’: The Story of a Cultural, Social, and Emotional WellBeing Program
Chapter 11: Implementing Indigenous Research Ethics at the Interface
Chapter 12: Kebi Paser: The Small Hill Approach to Research, Ethics and Cultural Protocols
Chapter 13: Static or Changing? Revealing Patterns of Cultural Influences on the Discourses of Research Ethics
Part III: Indigenous/Non-Indigenous Partnerships
Chapter 14: Decolonising Māori-Pākehā Research Collaborations: Towards an Ethics of Whanaungatanga and Manaakitanga in Cross-Cultural Research Relationships
Chapter 15: Kei Tua O Te Arai (Beyond the Veil): Taonga Puoro and Contemporary Technologies in Musical Conversation
Chapter 16: Yuta Anthropology
Chapter 17: What Does a Shared Space Look Like? a Dialogue of a Research Partnership
Chapter 18: The Struggle Against Neo-Colonial Academic Exoticising in Postgraduate Research
Chapter 19: A Deeper Deep Listening: Doing Pre-Ethics Fieldwork in Aotearoa New Zealand
Index