TY - JOUR
T1 - Antiracist Interventive Interviewing
T2 - Subverting Colonial Interventions with Public Sector Workers
AU - Allen, Willow Samara
AU - Nath, Nisha
AU - Georges, Trista
N1 - Funding Information:
Critically, as asserts, theories of change are implicit in all social science research, making methodological choices in antiracist and anticolonial research deeply significant. Engaging with our participants in their meso-level lives is not intended solely to document harm, but to support interrupting systemic patterns of learning and acting that work to foreclose anticolonial futures. For this reason, our interventive methodology is intended to open up a space for participants to narrate their relationship to public sector work, and most critically for participants to locate sites where they may witness and utilize discretionary power to intervene in settler colonial logics and relations. This work is supported by multiscalar interventions built into our framework. Extending Okolie’s method, we locate ourselves within bodies of scholarship working to enunciate a decolonial and anticolonial ethos and analysis in antiracist and anticolonial methodologies (; ).
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.
PY - 2023/1/1
Y1 - 2023/1/1
N2 - What does it mean to intervene in antiracist interviews with public sector workers? What do interventions look like in research seeking to name complicity in settler colonial violence and imagine otherwise relationships between non-Indigenous and Indigenous people? How might we methodologically define interventions and their pedagogical purpose(s)? In this paper, we share our experience of adopting a dual-pedagogical antiracist interventive research methodology in our qualitative research with public sector workers on settler colonial socialization. Building on antiracist interventive interviewing method, we map out our conceptualization of interventions as multidirectional and multiscalar. We narrate how we see interventions as dual pedagogical moments of disruption and possibility occurring at three scales, where we intervene to support our participants’ learning and they intervene to support ours. Our approach is illuminated through illustrations from our transcribed data of virtual interviews with 32 public sector workers in BC (n = 23) and Alberta (n = 9), and through our reflections on our research process. Our analysis demonstrates that interventions have three key effects. First, they are generatively disruptive in that they offer better access to understanding processes of settler colonial socialization. Second, interventions create junctures for antiracist and anticolonial learning. Third, interventions with participants open up opportunities to imagine otherwise beyond the strictures of settler colonialism, and orient towards anticolonial praxis rooted in recognition of Indigenous sovereignties. We conclude with a vocabulary of interventions meant to offer other qualitative researchers possibilities for how to intervene to better access and disrupt sites of deep colonizing.
AB - What does it mean to intervene in antiracist interviews with public sector workers? What do interventions look like in research seeking to name complicity in settler colonial violence and imagine otherwise relationships between non-Indigenous and Indigenous people? How might we methodologically define interventions and their pedagogical purpose(s)? In this paper, we share our experience of adopting a dual-pedagogical antiracist interventive research methodology in our qualitative research with public sector workers on settler colonial socialization. Building on antiracist interventive interviewing method, we map out our conceptualization of interventions as multidirectional and multiscalar. We narrate how we see interventions as dual pedagogical moments of disruption and possibility occurring at three scales, where we intervene to support our participants’ learning and they intervene to support ours. Our approach is illuminated through illustrations from our transcribed data of virtual interviews with 32 public sector workers in BC (n = 23) and Alberta (n = 9), and through our reflections on our research process. Our analysis demonstrates that interventions have three key effects. First, they are generatively disruptive in that they offer better access to understanding processes of settler colonial socialization. Second, interventions create junctures for antiracist and anticolonial learning. Third, interventions with participants open up opportunities to imagine otherwise beyond the strictures of settler colonialism, and orient towards anticolonial praxis rooted in recognition of Indigenous sovereignties. We conclude with a vocabulary of interventions meant to offer other qualitative researchers possibilities for how to intervene to better access and disrupt sites of deep colonizing.
KW - antiracism and anticolonial research
KW - discretion
KW - public sector
KW - qualitative interviewing
KW - settler colonial socialization
KW - settler colonialism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85160416990&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/16094069231166655
DO - 10.1177/16094069231166655
M3 - Journal Article
AN - SCOPUS:85160416990
VL - 22
JO - International Journal of Qualitative Methods
JF - International Journal of Qualitative Methods
ER -