Un/settling Ethical Issues: Indigenisation on Colonial Terms
Un/settling Ethical Issues: Indigenisation on Colonial Terms
Author(s): Ampersand PasleySubject(s): Anthropology, Gender Studies, Ethics / Practical Philosophy
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: Indigenisation; research ethics; decolonisation; trans and irawhiti takatāpui; sexuality education; one-world ontology;
Summary/Abstract: This paper explores a series of conundra that arose about koha, kaupapa whānau and wānanga in an ethics application for a study on trans and irawhiti takatāpui youth-led sexuality education. Thinking with policy documents, Indigenisation and decolonising approaches to tertiary education, the paper illustrates the issues that arise when Indigenous concepts are forced to operate on settler terms. Rather than rejecting Western approaches outright, accountability is sought where the university’s appropriation of Indigenous concepts proves disingenuous, and strategies for acknowledging the multiplicitous constituents of the university are explored. Integrally, the paper provides clear examples where the institution has facilitated its own decolonisation, demonstrating how the possibility of a more just university is already in our grasp.
Journal: Knowledge Cultures
- Issue Year: 1/2025
- Issue No: 13
- Page Range: 82-104
- Page Count: 23
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF