All practicum projects at the Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies (CIS) must follow ethical research protocols and pass a research ethics review.
The Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies (CIS) recognizes that universities and other research institutions have a long and troubling history of colonial extraction, abuse, and violence against Indigenous peoples.
Our curriculum teaches students about that history, along with ways that researchers can be in more ethical, respectful, and reciprocal relationship with Indigenous communities.
CIS ethics review
All practicum projects for the First Nations Indigenous Studies (FNIS) practicum course must follow ethical research protocols and pass a research ethics review.
Research ethics are the methods, practices, and principles of research that ensure it does as little harm as possible and, whenever possible, makes a meaningful contribution to the communities and organizations involved. This is particularly the case with projects that require personal information from people, such as interviews, testimony, surveys, etc., but also includes potentially sensitive materials in archives, records, and databases.
The purpose of the CIS Ethics Review is not to interfere with or substitute for an organization’s existing research ethics processes, but to complement them (or, if there are no processes in place, to offer a template for such work). If your organization already has research ethics protocols, please let your practicum student know early in the process.
In advance of practicum, our students receive research ethics training including principles of consent, confidentiality, transparency, and reciprocity. Instructors work with students to balance the needs and obligations of partner organizations with students’ responsibilities as researchers.
Ethics review process
In early October, after students have partnered with an organization and have developed a solid plan for the project and its deliverables, students begin a focused research ethics application, answering a series of questions about the scope of the project, its potential positive and negative impacts, and mitigation plans for reducing harm.
This process takes a few weeks at minimum, and students work with one another (within the scope of confidentiality protocols) and with the Practicum instructional staff, as well as with their organization supervisor(s), to address any potential areas of concern throughout October and into November.
In mid-November, completed applications are submitted to the CIS Student Research Review Committee, which includes faculty from FNIS and FNEL, representatives from the University-level ethics review board, a graduate student with experience in the research ethics process, and a community member.
The Committee examines each application in detail and responds with questions or concerns. Students must respond to each of the Committee queries (called provisos) and resubmit to the Committee Chair.
This process can occasionally take a bit of back and forth and may involve consultations with partners to ensure that any suggested changes to the project design still align with the partner’s needs.
When the final provisos have been resolved and approved, the student can then use the ethics application as a guide for completing their project in a respectful and responsible way.