Indigenous Health and Disability
Aim and Approach
Every instance of purpose, data collection, use and outputs supporting research involving Indigenous Peoples of Canada will be governed by the communities themselves, according to the principles of CARE, OCAP, and National Inuit Strategy on Research, and the Tri-Council Policy Statement, Chapter 9; Research Involving the First Nations, Inuit, and Metis Peoples of Canada. Merging Indigenous and disability research methodologies will provide the platform on which to build the best tools and practices for this stream, relying on Indigenous research methods and Indigenous Standpoint Theory (IST) in collaboration with Critical Disability Perspectives. Indigenous Peoples’ voices and perspectives are the most reliable sources in which responsive, culturally appropriate accessible health systems are defined, designed and delivered within each specific community. The CERC will work directly with Indigenous Communities across Canada and develop community driven projects that: a) seek to address the disproportionate rates of disability that are directly related discriminatory and inaccessible healthcare systems and services; and b) explore and identify appropriate, locally responsive healthcare design, delivery and practices that will effectively respond to Indigenous-disability community members to address the risk of co-morbidity across the life course and premature mortality.