Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is a promising decolonizing approach to health and social sciences research with First Nation Peoples. In CBPR, the use of a community advisory committee can act as an anchoring site for trusting reciprocal relationships, collaborative decision-making, and co-learning and cocreation. Through a qualitative case study, this article illustrates the collective experiences of a wellestablished, multidisciplinary, and intersectoral committee that reviews, monitors, and guides multiple research projects in a First Nation community in Canada. Participants of the Alexander Research Committee (ARC) share examples of the value of fostering a high level of commitment to building both positive working relationships and learning spaces that ultimately result in research and policy impacts for their community.
CITATION STYLE
Gokiert, R. J., Willows, N. D., Georgis, R., & Stringer, H. (2017). Wâhkôhtowin: The governance of good community-academic research relationships to improve the health and well-being of children in Alexander First Nation. International Indigenous Policy Journal, 8(2). https://doi.org/10.18584/iipj.2017.8.2.8
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