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The Transformative Community : Gathering the Untold Stories of Collaborative Research and Community Re-integration for Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples, Post-Incarceration and Beyond

Crier, Nicolas David; Timler, Kelsey; Keating, Patrick; Young, Pam; Price, Elder Roberta; Brown, Helen

2021-11-03

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Link to UBC Open Collections

https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0406443

Link to Turtle Island Journal of Indigenous Health

https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/tijih/article/view/36134

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Description

The Canadian carceral system is purposefully designed to disconnect and isolate people. Ongoing colonialism in Canada at the intersection of carceral, social service, health and child welfare systems has resulted in the disproportionate and unjust representation of Indigenous Peoples across each stage of the disciplinary process. Given the ongoing silencing of people who are or have been incarcerated, Participatory Action Research led by peers with lived and living experience of the carceral state and grounded in the wisdom of Indigenous Elders is urgently needed. In this context, a research network called the Transformative Health and Justice Research Cluster based out of University of British Columbia (THRJC), has formed to disrupt status quo research practices, bringing together Indigenous and non-Indigenous Peer Leaders, Elders, academics, community advocates and student trainees, and support the empowerment of people who have been incarcerated. In this reflective piece, I, Nicolas Crier, one of the Peer Leaders, will provide an overview of the who, what, why, when and how of the THJRC, reflecting on the impacts and strengths of the collaborative community in general, as well as within the specific context of COVID-19. Co-authors representing diverse positionalities and perspectives within the THRJC add their voices where relevant throughout