Border Work in the Contact Zone: Thinking Indigenous/non-Indigenous collaboration spatially

Title
Border Work in the Contact Zone: Thinking Indigenous/non-Indigenous collaboration spatially
Publication Date
2003
Author(s)
Somerville, Margaret Jean
Perkins, T
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1080/0725686032000172597
UNE publication id
une:1483
Abstract
This paper explores different ways of conceptualising Indigenous/non- Indigenous research collaboration and partnerships. It begins with a brief outline of the problem of current conceptualisations within the critical paradigm in qualitative research. It proposes the idea of the contact zone as a useful way to theorise the site, and border work as a way to understand the emotional and intellectual work, of intercultural collaboration. It applies these ideas to the analysis of a series of conversations between team members involved in a research partnership between an Australian Aboriginal corporation and a university. This analysis suggests that the way borders are conceived differently by different team members depends on their particular political investments. A range of border maintenance and border crossings is necessary for the task of achieving effective collaboration. The 'discomfort' zone of cultural contact is usefully conceived as an area of productive tension in which differences can generate hybrid outcomes such as team produced books for the organisation's ecotourism enterprise.
Link
Citation
Journal of Intercultural Studies, 24(3), p. 253-266
ISSN
1469-9540
0725-6868
Start page
253
End page
266

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