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PDW OS Decolonizing Research by Crafting Position Statements

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When:
14:30, Saturday 17 May 2025 (1 hour 15 minutes)
Breaks:
Coffee break   03:45 PM to 04:00 PM (15 minutes)
Where:
University of Waterloo - 1104 School of Accounting and Finance (SAF) Hagey Hall   Virtual session
The virtual room join links will be shown here a few minutes before the session start time.
The virtual room is expected to open at approximately 14:00.
Themes:
OSorganizational studiesPDWHYBRIDVIRTUAL

Extended Abstract

At last year’s daylong ASAC colloquium on Indigenous research, Teddy Carter (Michel) explicated the nature and importance of self-location as an Indigenous research practice. Self-location has parallels in other disciplines and research traditions, especially critical and feminist traditions. Terms include (self-) position, (self-) positionality, and (research) standpoint. Common among these traditions is the recognition that all research is produced by people who have particular backgrounds, knowledge bases, and interests. These factors influence the choice of topics and methods that researchers use. Position statements in research provide insight into the factors that influence the process of the research. In contrast, colonial approaches to (social) science assume that research choices are objective and value-free, most commonly illustrated in quantitative research designs. Thus, including position statements organizational research is a decolonizing research practice.

 

Writing position statements and discussing them in small groups is the focus of this workshop. Three people will talk for ten minutes each about the use of position statements in critical, feminist, and Indigenous research, why they should be used in all organization studies research, and changes needed from journal editors and reviewers. Each PDW participant will then spend 20 minutes crafting a position statements related to a research topic of their interest. For the next 25 minutes, participants will form small groups and share their statements with each other and discuss them developmentally.

 

We request pre-registration so that we can send participants a reading list. Nevertheless, we welcome anyone who is curious to attend and learn. 

 

Workshop Facilitators: 

David L. Deephouse (Primary Contact), Professor, U. of Alberta. david.deephouse@ualberta.ca

Kai Lamertz, Professor, Athabasca University. kailamertz@athabascau.ca  

William M. Foster, Professor, University of Alberta. wfoster@ualberta.ca

Documents

Who's Attending

Phaedra Burke
Faculty
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
Emily Salmon
Assistant Professor, Business & Society
Simon Fraser University
Guilherme Azevedo
Associate Professor
Audencia Business School
Stefanie Ruel
Assistant Professor, Organizational Behaviour
Cape Breton University
David Deephouse
Professor
University of Alberta
André Luis Bezerra Cavalcanti Godoi
PhD Candidate
HEC Montréal
Keshav Krishnamurty
University of Toronto
Brittany Jackson
PhD Candidate
Concordia University
Mohammad Behroyan
PhD Student
Toronto Metropolitan University
Paul D. Larson
CN Professor of SCM
University of Manitoba
Forough Sharifi
PhD Student in Management
University of Guelph
Anna Kim
McGill University
Robert Anderson
Professor Emeritus
University of Regina
Gildas Agbon
PhD student
Université Laval
Julie Bernard
Assistant Professor
University of Waterloo
Farshad Amini
PhD candidate
Memorial University of Newfoundland
Emma Segal
Creative Director & PhD Candidate
emmasegal.co
Kai Lamertz
Athabasca University

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