INDIGENOUS ORGANIZATIONS' AND COMMUNITIES' RESEARCH LAB

About the Allyship project
2018- Present
As it becomes more popular to support humanitarianism, civil rights, reconciliation efforts, and social justice, many people are left to wonder, "What is the appropriate role of an ally?"
Conflicting messages abound. Some advice calls non-Indigenous people (or, similarly, non-Black people) to "do something", and that anything less than action is complacence to a racist system. At the same, other advice argues that White perspectives, control, leadership, and Western values have been producing and re-producing the inequitable landscape that historically recent allies are hoping to help challenge. This advice calls allies to play a more supportive, background role, at times sitting aside so that members from the marginalized groups they purportedly want to help can lead.
Through a set of three studies, we are working to identify different ways of acting in solidarity with Indigenous Peoples and recommendations for how to be a good ally. First, we identified different ways that non-Indigenous think, feel, and act in solidarity with Indigenous Peoples using a innovative method (Q-methodology). Second, we collected positive and negative ally stories from Indigenous students from their own life, and, third, we are interviewing Indigenous faculty to provide their perspective on the types of allies they need for their work.

Presentations
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​Buliga, E., Harbourne, M., & Murry, A. (2021, August 27). Non-Indigenous allyship: Findings from a Q-Methodological study with undergraduate students [Oral presentation]. Society for Community Research and Action, virtual conference. https://scra27.org/index.php/download_file/view/2689/3798/
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Murry, A., Buliga, E., & Harbourne, M. (2022, October 7th). So you want to be an ally? An exploration of non-Indigenous claims of allyship and an Indigenous definition of what it means to be an ally. American Indian Science and Engineering Society’s annual conference, Palm Springs, CA.
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Murry, A., Buliga, E., & Harbourne, M. (in prep). So you think you’re an ally? A mixed-method study on non-Indigenous identification as an ally and Indigenous students’ expectations of an ally. Journal of Applied Social Psychology
