Lane 219: Relational Communication for Interdisciplinary Work
Parent Issue: miadisabelle/Etuaptmumk-RSM#216
Child Issue: miadisabelle/Etuaptmumk-RSM#219
Date: 2026-06-01
Research Focus
Communication patterns across epistemological divides; narrative accountability; arts-based epistemology; cautions against appropriation.
Key Findings
1. Arts-Based Epistemology as Knowledge Practice
Arts-based research (ABR) treats artistic creation—film, visual media, performance—as a generative mode of inquiry, not representational tool. Knowledge emerges through:
- Affective & relational knowing (not objective extraction)
- Embodied, sensory dimensions inaccessible to verbal/quantitative methods
- Collective, contextual knowledge that exists in the relational space between maker, material, and witness
2. Communication Patterns for Relational Practice
| Pattern | Frame | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Lead with Recognition | "Your work on [X] demonstrates thinking about [theme]. We're exploring similar ground." | Signals peer inquiry; positions as co-explorer |
| Name Shared Tension | "We're both navigating how to center Indigenous knowledge in institutions built on Western epistemology." | Acknowledges complexity; invites collaborative thinking |
| Invite Rather Than Pitch | "We'd value your perspective on [question]. Would you have time for a conversation?" | Respects autonomy; opens dialogue |
| Acknowledge Constraints | "We understand institutional time is precious. We're seeking intellectual resonance, not partnership yet." | Builds trust through realism |
| Close with Integrity | "Here's what we're asking for [specific]. Here's what we're not." | Clear boundaries; demonstrates respect |
3. Narrative Accountability in Indigenous Research
Indigenous scholars must author their own work. The caution: Western researchers can extract Indigenous knowledge without community accountability.
Key Principle: Engagement requires protocols that honor Indigenous authority in knowledge production.
4. OCAP® as Communication Framework
OCAP® (Ownership, Control, Access, Possession) is not just data governance—it's a communication ethic:
- Ownership: Who authors and owns this knowledge?
- Control: Who decides how it's used?
- Access: Who can access and under what conditions?
- Possession: Who holds stewardship?
When communicating across epistemologies, these questions structure relational accountability.
Key Cautions
- Avoid Extraction: Don't position Indigenous frameworks as tools to be "applied"
- Avoid Appropriation: Honor originating communities; show relational accountability
- Avoid Frictionless Language: Indigenous sovereignty requires intentional friction (protocols, gatekeeping)
- Avoid Generic Decolonial Framing: Be specific about epistemological commitments and relational accountability
Sources
-
SAGE Methods Handbook. "Art-Based Research." https://methods.sagepub.com/hnbk/edvol/handbook-of-the-arts-in-qualitative-research/chpt/artbased-research
-
First Nations Information Governance Centre. "OCAP® Principles Overview." https://fnigc.ca/ocap-training/
-
University of Toronto. "OCAP® Principles Overview." https://mdl.library.utoronto.ca/mdl-blog/first-nations-principles-ownership-control-access-and-possession-ocapr-pathway-data
-
eScholarship. "Effective Communication: The 4th Mission of Universities—a 21st Century Challenge." https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0h26647z