Negotiating the right path: Working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to Aboriginal peoples

This paper outlines the centrality of a Nyoongar worldview to an engagement framework designed with the Nyoongar community to enable the community to work meaningfully with service providers in the mental health and drug and alcohol sectors to bring about systems change. This paper follows on from a...

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Main Authors: Wright, Michael, O'Connell, M.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://journal.alara.net.au/index.php/alarj
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11610
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author Wright, Michael
O'Connell, M.
author_facet Wright, Michael
O'Connell, M.
author_sort Wright, Michael
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper outlines the centrality of a Nyoongar worldview to an engagement framework designed with the Nyoongar community to enable the community to work meaningfully with service providers in the mental health and drug and alcohol sectors to bring about systems change. This paper follows on from a previous paper by the author (Wright 2011) in which the principles and methods of both Indigenous research and participatory action research are explored in relation to each other as a way of mitigating the delegitimising effects of colonisation. Privileging a Nyoongar worldview disrupts the dominant western paradigm so that service providers and the Nyoongar community can meaningfully work together to change the way services are provided to Nyoongar people experiencing mental health and drug and alcohol concerns, and indeed offer a way forward in working with other Aboriginal communities.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-116102017-01-30T11:25:48Z Negotiating the right path: Working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to Aboriginal peoples Wright, Michael O'Connell, M. This paper outlines the centrality of a Nyoongar worldview to an engagement framework designed with the Nyoongar community to enable the community to work meaningfully with service providers in the mental health and drug and alcohol sectors to bring about systems change. This paper follows on from a previous paper by the author (Wright 2011) in which the principles and methods of both Indigenous research and participatory action research are explored in relation to each other as a way of mitigating the delegitimising effects of colonisation. Privileging a Nyoongar worldview disrupts the dominant western paradigm so that service providers and the Nyoongar community can meaningfully work together to change the way services are provided to Nyoongar people experiencing mental health and drug and alcohol concerns, and indeed offer a way forward in working with other Aboriginal communities. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11610 http://journal.alara.net.au/index.php/alarj fulltext
spellingShingle Wright, Michael
O'Connell, M.
Negotiating the right path: Working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to Aboriginal peoples
title Negotiating the right path: Working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to Aboriginal peoples
title_full Negotiating the right path: Working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to Aboriginal peoples
title_fullStr Negotiating the right path: Working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to Aboriginal peoples
title_full_unstemmed Negotiating the right path: Working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to Aboriginal peoples
title_short Negotiating the right path: Working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to Aboriginal peoples
title_sort negotiating the right path: working together to effect change in healthcare service provision to aboriginal peoples
url http://journal.alara.net.au/index.php/alarj
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11610