![]() I engaged with accessible scholarship on decolonising research, including Linda Tuhiwai Smith’s Decolonizing Methodologies, Alison Phipps’ Decolonising Multilingualism, and Carolina Alonso Bejarano and colleagues’ Decolonizing Ethnography, which made me more aware of the responsibility of all researchers to question their complicity with research principles and practices that reinforce rather than disrupt the colonial project. It is only in recent times that I began questioning my complicity with colonial structures and institutions as an academic, both as an educator who teaches research methods and as a researcher who uses creative, participatory methods. ![]() ![]() For many years, as a migrant settler living on Bedigal land in so-called Australia, I thought that decolonisation was mainly a concern for Indigenous and decolonial scholars in the humanities. ![]()
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