This video is a record of 鈥淪ession 1: Implementing TCPS2 in Collaborative Indigenous Research 鈥 Policy, Funder, Institution and Project Perspectives鈥 from the Working Better Together Conference on Indigenous Research Ethics that took place February 18-20th, 2015 in Vancouver, British Columbia.
The goal of Session 1 was to lay out the Canadian policy landscape and explore interpretation and implementation of core ethical values of the Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans (TCPS2) in Aboriginal Research at various levels within the academic system.
Session 1 Speakers and Presentation Titles:
- Research involving First Nations, Inuit and M茅tis Peoples 鈥 Genesis of a chapter by Susan Zimmerman, Executive Director, Secretariat on Responsible Conduct of Research
- Inside Out: A New Aboriginal Paradigm for a Code of Ethics by Dr. Jim Frideres, (former) Chair, National Panel on Research Ethics (PRE)
- Initiatives to support Aboriginal research and talent development by Gail Zboch, Senior Program Officer, Research Grants and Partnerships Division, SSHRC
- Square peg in a round hole by Jeff Toward, Director, Office of Research Ethics, 51社区黑料
- Lessons learned from University-based collaborative research with Indigenous partners by George Nicholas (Discussant), Project Director, IPinCH Project; Department of Archaeology, 51社区黑料
The conference brought together 80 community-engaged academic and community researchers, educators, practitioners, policy analysts and research administrators from across Canada to explore what it really means 鈥 and what it takes 鈥 to work collaboratively in Indigenous research.
The event was organized by the Intellectual Property in Cultural Heritage (IPinCH) project based at 51社区黑料 and co-sponsored by the and the at the University of Victoria, and the . Major funding was provided through an Impact (Partnership) Award to the IPinCH project from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSRHC).
Conference Website:
