학술논문

'Relationships 'Are' Reality': Centering Relationality to Investigate Land, Indigeneity, Blackness, and Futurity
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Author
Kyle Halle-Erby (ORCID 0000-0003-4125-6494)
Source
International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE). 2024 37(1):114-131.
Subject
Indigenous Populations
Blacks
African Americans
Needs
Educational Research
Research Needs
Land Settlement
Land Use
Colonialism
Praxis
Epistemology
Research Methodology
Research Problems
Relationship
Futures (of Society)
Language
English
ISSN
0951-8398
1366-5898
Abstract
This paper proposes that the paradigm of relationality, engaged methodologically, can be the basis of praxis that purposefully moves away from business-oriented notions of "best practices" and toward education research that meets the needs of Indigenous and Black communities currently designing futures within settler colonial states during climate catastrophe. In so doing, the paper considers what a critical Indigenous research paradigm requires of researchers, what a critical Black epistemology requires, and what we can learn by bringing the two together in a relational approach to qualitative research. Relationality is defined and placed in historical context. The author's positionality is engaged by exploring his relationship to relationality through examination of the confluence of Black and Indigenous epistemologies in the United States. Through auto-reflection on a qualitative study of land-based education, this paper analyzes research "openings" as an example of relational methodology praxis. The paper offers a critical analysis of specific, detailed methodological actions undertaken to practice relationality in order to create cracks in existing educational research methodologies through which relationality can take root.