THIRD EYE SEEING: EXAMINING DECOLONIAL, INTERSECTIONAL PEDAGOGIES IN CANADIAN NURSING AND MEDICAL (NURSMED) EDUCATION by TAQDIR BHANDAL B.Sc. Hon, Dalhousie University, 2012 M.A., York University, 2014 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL STUDIES (Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Social Justice) THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver) February 2022 © Taqdir Bhandal, 2022 The following individuals certify that they have read, and recommend to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies for acceptance, the dissertation entitled: Third Eye Seeing: Examining Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian Nursing and Medical (NursMed) Education submitted by Taqdir Bhandal in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Social Justice Examining Committee: Dr. Annette J. Browne, Nursing, UBC Supervisor Dr. Cash Ahenakew, Educational Studies, UBC Supervisory Committee Member Dr. Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham, Nursing, TWU Supervisory Committee Member Dr. Minelle Mahtani, Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Social Justice, UBC University Examiner Dr. Patricia Spittal, Population and Public Health, UBC University Examiner ii Abstract The Third Eye Seeing project investigates how Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can inform Canadian Nursing and Medical (NursMed) Education. The intention of the project is to contribute to the development of Canadian NursMed Education and efforts to redress deepening, intersecting health and social inequities. Briefly, Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies are philosophies of learning that encourage teachers and students to reflect on health through the lenses of settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice. Drawing on Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, Canadian NursMed Education could ostensibly prepare learners to address the symptoms of modernity, especially settler-colonialism. Diverse academic perspectives have led me to the following research questions: (A) What are the ways in which Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can inform Canadian NursMed Education? (B) What are the potential struggles and adaptations required to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies within Canadian NursMed Education? Drawing on critical ethnographic research methods, I conducted in-depth interviews with faculty members and engaged in participant observation of classrooms in university-based Canadian NursMed Education. The dissertation as a whole, and the analysis was informed by theoretical perspectives including decolonization, intersectionality, and critical theory. Interpretive description guided the analysis of the themes reflected in the data. The research findings are organized into three chapters, beginning with a presentation of four common ‘institutional features’ influencing the uptake of pedagogical approaches: crowded curriculum, academic freedom, the recent Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action, and admissions processes. The next set of findings addresses the complex strategies participants iii applied to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in their teaching approaches. Lastly, the findings illustrate the emotional and spiritual toll some faculty members face when attempting to deliver Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Based on an analysis, I discuss the concept of Third Eye Seeing as a heuristic (in solidarity with Two-Eyed Seeing) to apply in creating adaptive pedagogies for Canadian NursMed Education. Through the application of multiple worldsenses teachers and students can support movements towards health equity, social justice, and unlearning/undoing settlercolonialism. With this context in mind, this dissertation project intended to generate new knowledge to stimulate dialogue and action regarding the role of Canadian NursMed Education as an upstream determinant of health. iv Lay Summary From 2015 – 2021, I led a research project to study social justice perspectives in Canadian nursing and medical education (Canadian NursMed Education). Specifically, I focused on two areas of theory and practice from social justice studies: decolonization and intersectionality. Then I got curious about how current nursing and medical teachers (faculty members) talk about and use these theories and practices in their classrooms. After reading research studies and reports written prior to 2018, I interviewed and observed a total of 25 faculty members in nursing and medicine across the country in 2019. In 2020-2021 during the surge of social justice movements, I put together a written report of the participants’ stories and experiences. As Canadian NursMed Education continues to adapt in the COVID-19 pandemic, I suggest it is an opportune time for teachers to evolve their teaching approaches using Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. v Preface The research questions and purpose for the project are based on my previous research programs, work experience, current interests, and suggestions from the supervisory committee. Through the incredible mentorship and guidance of my supervisor, Dr. Annette Browne, the scope of the study was clearly defined. I conducted all interviews and classroom observations. Analysis of the stories and data took place in correspondence with Dr. Browne and committee members Dr. Cash Ahenakew and Dr. Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham. The research writing and data collection was done by me, the student, Taqdir Kaur Bhandal. The Behavioural Research Ethics Board (BREB) at the University of British Columbia (UBC) approved the research design and implementation reported in Chapter Four. The BREB certificate number was: H17-02627. Publications from the project: Bhandal, T. (2016). Possibilities for intersectional theorizing in Canadian historiography: The subaltern narrative of Canadian medical schools. The Graduate History Review, 5(1), 46-82. Bhandal, T. (2018). Ethical globalization? Decolonizing theoretical perspectives for internationalization in Canadian medical education. Canadian Medical Education Journal, 9(2), e33-e45. vi Table of Contents Abstract......................................................................................................................................... iii Lay Summary .................................................................................................................................v Preface ........................................................................................................................................... vi Table of Contents ........................................................................................................................ vii List of Tables ............................................................................................................................... xii Acknowledgements .................................................................................................................... xiii Dedication .....................................................................................................................................xv Chapter 1: Introduction ................................................................................................................1 1.1 The Central Problem ....................................................................................................... 4 1.2 Research Purpose and Questions .................................................................................... 5 1.2.1 Overarching Research Questions ................................................................................ 6 1.2.2 Sub-Research Questions ............................................................................................. 6 1.3 Organization of Thesis .................................................................................................... 7 Chapter 2: Synthesis of Literature ...............................................................................................8 2.1 Context: Deepening Health and Social Inequities in Canada ......................................... 8 2.1.1 Current Evidence on Health and Social Inequities ..................................................... 8 2.1.2 Health Equity and Settler-Colonialism in the Borders of Canada ............................ 11 2.1.3 Root Causes: Intersecting Modern Processes ........................................................... 11 2.1.4 Defining Settler-Colonialism .................................................................................... 14 2.1.5 Preparing the Next Generation of Nurses and Doctors to Heal Root Causes ........... 15 2.1.6 Pedagogies for New Paradigms of Canadian NursMed Education .......................... 18 vii 2.1.7 Social Determinants of Health: A Primary Pedagogical Lens .................................. 18 2.2 Culture, Culture Everywhere: The Gravitational Pull of Culturalism .......................... 20 2.2.1 Cultural Diversity...................................................................................................... 22 2.2.2 Cultural Competency & Sensitivity .......................................................................... 23 2.2.3 Cultural Safety .......................................................................................................... 24 2.3 Critical Pedagogies in Canadian Educational Studies .................................................. 27 2.4 Calls to Action Towards Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies .................................. 29 2.4.1 Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and Anti-Racism ................................................... 30 2.4.2 Composition of Faculty in Canadian NursMed Education ....................................... 32 2.4.3 Truth and Reconciliation Commission ..................................................................... 36 2.5 Summary ....................................................................................................................... 38 Chapter 3: Theoretical Perspectives ..........................................................................................40 3.1 Positionality of the Researcher ..................................................................................... 40 3.2 Critical Theory .............................................................................................................. 44 3.3 Decolonization .............................................................................................................. 46 3.3.1 Decolonizing Education ............................................................................................ 46 3.3.2 Learning from Two-Eyed Seeing as Mi'kmaw Pedagogy ........................................ 48 3.3.3 Significance of the Third Eye in South Asian Epistemologies ................................. 49 3.3.4 Synergistic Pedagogies ............................................................................................. 50 3.3.5 Seeing through Multiple Perspectives (including Biomedicine) .............................. 50 3.4 Intersectionality............................................................................................................. 52 3.5 Summary ....................................................................................................................... 53 viii Chapter 4: Methodology and Research Design .........................................................................55 4.1 Methodological Approaches ......................................................................................... 55 4.1.1 Critical Ethnographic Methods ................................................................................. 55 4.1.2 Studying Up .............................................................................................................. 60 4.2 Research Setting............................................................................................................ 61 4.3 Recruitment and Sampling ............................................................................................ 61 4.4 Ethical Considerations .................................................................................................. 62 4.5 Overview of Participants............................................................................................... 64 4.5.1 Number of Participants ............................................................................................. 67 4.5.2 Geography of Participants......................................................................................... 67 4.5.3 Ancestral Lineages and Religions of Participants .................................................... 67 4.5.4 Number of Years Teaching in Canadian NursMed Education ................................. 68 4.5.5 Genders of Participants ............................................................................................. 68 4.6 Data Collection ............................................................................................................. 69 4.6.1 Interview Process ...................................................................................................... 69 4.6.2 Observation Process .................................................................................................. 71 4.7 Data Analysis ................................................................................................................ 72 4.8 Rigour and Scientific Integrity...................................................................................... 75 4.8.1 Credibility of the Analysis ........................................................................................ 75 4.8.2 Limitations of the Research ...................................................................................... 78 4.9 Summary ....................................................................................................................... 79 ix Chapter 5: "The Real Challenge is the System": Institutional Features ...............................80 5.1 Accreditation and Crowded Curriculum ....................................................................... 82 5.2 Academic Freedom in Canadian NursMed Education.................................................. 90 5.3 Having an Intervention: Responses to TRC Calls to Action ........................................ 96 5.4 Who Gets to Be a Nurse or Doctor? Admissions Processes ....................................... 103 5.5 Summary ..................................................................................................................... 113 Chapter 6: "We Need to Take Responsibility for Our Own Education": The Complexities of Integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies .............................................................115 6.1 Struggling with 'Culture': Circumventing Culturalism as a Pedagogy ....................... 115 6.2 EDI, Anti-Racism, and TRC Shape Teacher's Efforts ................................................ 126 6.2.1 Perspectives on Calls to Action: EDI and Anti-Racism ......................................... 127 6.2.2 Perspectives on Calls to Action: TRC .................................................................... 130 6.3 Attempts to Integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Practice ................... 136 6.4 Summary ..................................................................................................................... 145 Chapter 7: "I Don't Feel Safe: The Emotional and Spiritual Costs of Implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies ......................................................................................146 7.1 The Limitations of Distracting Technologies ............................................................. 147 7.2 Resistance and Support from Colleagues ................................................................... 150 7.3 "It's a Difficult Place for Safe Conversations": Student Responses ........................... 161 7.4 Detecting, Interpreting, and Preparing for the Emotional and Spiritual Costs ........... 169 7.5 Summary ..................................................................................................................... 176 x Chapter 8: Discussion & Implications: Opening up the Third Eye ......................................177 8.1 Third Eye Seeing as a heuristic in Canadian NursMed Education ............................. 180 8.2 Third Eye Seeing and the Institutional Features ......................................................... 182 8.2.1 Examining the Implications of Institutional Features ............................................. 182 8.2.2 Crowded Curriculum & Constant Consumption..................................................... 183 8.2.3 Academic Freedom and Admissions ...................................................................... 184 8.2.4 Punctuated Equilibrium and TRC Calls to Action.................................................. 186 8.2.5 Recommendations based on Chapter 5 Findings .................................................... 187 8.3 Third Eye Seeing and the Complexities of Evolving Pedagogies .............................. 189 8.3.1 Pathologization and Culturalism ............................................................................. 190 8.3.2 Pluralism and Collective Awareness ...................................................................... 191 8.3.3 Braiding Multiple Worldsenses .............................................................................. 192 8.3.4 Recommendations based on Chapter 6 Findings .................................................... 194 8.4 (Ad)dressing and Healing the Soul Wound in Canadian NursMed Education ........... 195 8.4.1 Examining Resistances and Supports ..................................................................... 196 8.4.2 Conscious Use of Digital Technologies .................................................................. 196 8.4.3 The Soul Pain of Settler-Colonialism and Student Reactions ................................ 198 8.4.4 Linking Roots with Colleagues............................................................................... 200 8.4.5 Recommendations based on Chapter 7 Findings .................................................... 201 8.5 Summary ..................................................................................................................... 203 Bibliography ...............................................................................................................................204 Appendix: Interview Guide.......................................................................................................251 xi List of Tables Table 1. Interview Participants ..................................................................................................... 80 Table 2. Observation Participants ................................................................................................. 81 xii Acknowledgements Land: Without the guidance and wisdom of the Land that I live with and on during the course of this dissertation, the project would never have happened. I’m eternally thankful to the planet and her medicines for carrying me through. I am so grateful to have worked with Dr. Annette Browne as my supervisor throughout the Third Eye Seeing project. Annette is an amazing role model for research done thoroughly, with intention, grit, and perseverance. Every time a fellow student shared their struggles about supervisors with me, I quietly thought– thank you Universe for sending me such an incredible mentor. Annette is the main midwife of Third Eye Seeing and without her this manuscript could not have been birthed. Annette – I’ll be dancing with you until the end! I had the honour of having two incredible teachers and mentors as part of my supervisory committee: Dr. Cash Ahenakew and Dr. Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham. Cash and Sheryl acted as scholarly and spiritual guides during Third Eye Seeing and celebrated each milestone in the journey. Sheryl and Cash – I’m in solidarity with you and your whole tribe as we continue to cycle into this new paradigm of life! Thank you to all of my ancestors, living and deceased who have gotten me to this place in time. xiii The Third Eye Seeing project was financially and energetically supported by the University of British Columbia Four Year Fellowship and The Canadian Institutes of Health Research Doctoral Award. The friendships and solidarities built during each phase of Third Eye Seeing were the exact right connections to support me through. A huge thank you goes to the following collectives and individuals: Thank you to all staff, faculty, and students at UBC’s Social Justice Institute – unicorns unite! Thank you to all staff, faculty, and students in the nursing and medical schools I visited and worked with – you all are so vital to the health of our communities and the health of this project. So grateful for all of the speakers at the Next Level Summit 2021. Thank you to my friends, Hilary, Rachael, Megan, Leanna, Hera, Guida, Alysha, Midori, and Emily who have cheered me on, talked me out of quitting numerous times, and sat in ceremony with me. Immense gratitude to Lisa Nichols for being a shining star to follow in the collapse/composting of modernity. And finally, to the Thursday Morning Writing Group (Shawna, Angela, Robin, Urooba, Roah and more!) who found me when I needed them most and held me accountable to completing the manuscript and defense. To my family members, Jeff, Noor, Bhera, Mom, Dad and all the Bethunes! WE DID IT!!!!! Thank you all for the lessons you’ve taught me, all the laughs, all the cries, the marinated chicken, Sunday dinners, and the paranthas that keep me nourished. Hopper, Berry, Lewis, Moofli, Wallace, and Hank – you all keep us going day in and day out. xiv Dedication I dedicate this project to the Earth. xv Chapter 1: Introduction In Canada and across the globe, human health is being re-imagined, researched and even declared as ‘in crisis’. Even prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many scholars, practitioners, and activists alike describe how the delivery of health care, modalities of healing, and the practice of teaching in Canadian Nursing and Medicine (NursMed) Education were reaching a critical juncture in the 21st century. Notably, distinguished scholars, large-scale statistical censuses, and documentarians have been reporting a widening gap in health and social equity across the globe and nationally (Baru & Mohan, 2018; Hankivsky et al., 2017; Prasad & Sengupta, 2019; Ruckert & Labonté, 2017; Walker et al., 2017). For instance, drug overdoses, especially of opioids, have reached record highs in Canada (Fisher et al., 2019). Canadian income-related health inequities are also a concern, especially in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic (Canadian Institute for Health Information, 2016; Huffington Post Canada, 2021). There also continues to be increases in the policing and imprisonment of communities racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour (Cole, 2020; Kaka, 2020; Maynard, 2017). Researchers in the fields of critical educational studies, NursMed Education, and social justice suggest that these statistics are symptoms of modern intersecting processes including settler-colonialism (McGibbon et al., 2014; ScholarStrikeCanada, 2020; Terruhn, 2019). The scholarly reporting of health and social inequities can serve to promote wellbeing, compassion, and adaptations in these conditions, in service of a socially just and sustainable humanity. As demonstrated during the spring, summer, and ongoing seasons of 1 the global pandemic, the health care labour force in Canada and beyond is critical to ensure these adaptations. The namesake of the project, ‘third eye’ is in strong solidarity with the lineage of ‘Two-Eyed Seeing’ conceptualized by Mi’kmaq Elders Murdena and Albert Marshall based in what is also known as Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada (Martin, 2012). Quoted in Martin (2012), they share, “Two-Eyed Seeing adamantly, respectfully, and passionately asks that we bring together our different ways of knowing to motivate people, Aboriginal and nonAboriginal alike, to use all our understandings so that we can leave the world a better place and not compromise the opportunities for our youth (in the sense of Seven Generations) through our own inaction” (p. 21). Building on the motivational vision of the quote above, Third Eye Seeing energetical and empirically also aligns with the concept of “braiding” put forth by the Decolonial Futures Collective which is, “… a practice yet-to-come located in a space in-between and at the edges of Indigenous and non-Indigenous ways of knowing and being, aiming to calibrate each sensibility towards a generative orientation and inter-weave their strands to create something new and contextually relevant, while not erasing differences, historical and systemic violences, uncertainty, conflict, paradoxes and contradictions” (Elwood et al., 2019. p. 21). 2 In South Asian philosophies, the third eye is considered one of seven energy centers or chakras of the human body as passed down orally and in scriptures of South Asian philosophies including Buddhism, Sikhism, Yoga, Ayurveda. I can note here that these philosophies go beyond borders, and are influenced by thousands of years of migrations that have taken place on the South Asian subcontinent. For instance, Ayurveda is a fusion of Northern Indian modalities, with Indigenous Dravidian perspectives, which themselves are connected to East African healing methodologies (LaFleur-Gangji, 2020). The third eye is predictably located in between the two physical eyes at the top of the nose bridge – creating three eyes through which one can see. Brahma Kumaris1 say this about the third eye, “The memorial of the soul is found in the…‘third eye', located in the centre of the forehead. Although invisible to the eye, a moment's meditation can re-open an awareness of this inner energy. This soul energy keeps us going - keeps us going for centuries.” (2020) This dissertation project is written during an important turning point of health, humanity, and Canadian NursMed Education (2015 – 2021). The concept of the third eye provides another necessary reminder we can continue to evolve pedagogies to heal and care for colleagues, patients, clients, and our fellow humans and more-than-humans despite the daily challenges of modernity2. Moreover, Third Eye Seeing builds solidarities with Two- 1 Brahma Kumaris is a feminist centered Vedas inspired educational organization. Modernity is a large-scale human created process understood to have started in approximately 1492 according to the Gregorian calendar of linear time. It can be further broken down into its most well-known 2 3 Eyed Seeing, Decolonization, and Intersectionality in service of dismantling settlercolonialism through multiple ways. 1.1 The Central Problem Through Third Eye Seeing I intend to create and share scholarly knowledge about Canadian NursMed Education as an upstream determinant of human health. While the intersections of income level, gender, sexuality, sex, ability and more have robust research programs in the realm of interdisciplinary health professions (Brosnan et al., 2016; Nisker, 2019; Sheppard et al., 2017; Siller et al., 2018; Wilsey et al., 2020), racialized identity, religion, spirituality, and ancestry in relation to health, health care, and pedagogy are reemerging as important areas of inquiry in 21st century Canadian NursMed Education. Namely, in this dissertation I examine pedagogy, or philosophies of teaching, in the research milieu which aim to redress the symptoms of modernity, especially settlercolonialism. The project unpacks the central problem of Canadian NursMed Education’s implications in and response to the widening gap in health and social inequities. The outcomes of the research include a timely report on the state of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Moreover, the dissertation builds on ongoing discussions about the process and impact of engaging pedagogies that attend to calls for anti-racism, social justice, decolonization, and intersectional diversity in Canadian NursMed Education. components: colonialism, capitalism, heteropatriarchy, and environmental extraction from the Earth (Lugones, 2010; Mignolo, 2011; Chakravorty Spivak, 1999). 4 1.2 Research Purpose and Questions The Third Eye Seeing dissertation project investigated how Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can inform Canadian Nursing and Medical (NursMed) Education. The purpose of this study was to contribute to dialogue regarding the ongoing development of Canadian NursMed Education. Briefly, Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies are philosophies of learning that encourage teachers and students to reflect on health through the lenses of settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice. The goals of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies are to prepare teachers and students to understand and address the root causes of health and social inequities. The intention is to influence Canadian NursMed Education as an upstream determinant of health. Implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can serve as a radical action step towards addressing practice recommendations from recently published strategic frameworks intended to institutions of higher education written by organizations such as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (2015), Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing (2015; 2020), the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada (2015; 2020), Canadian Institutes of Health Research (2019), Public Health Agency of Canada (2018), and Universities Canada (2017). The published frameworks are largely influenced by social justice movements with particular attention to colonialism, such as Black Lives Matter (Taylor, 2017; Potvin, 2020), Idle No More (Kino-nda-niimi Collective, 2014), and No One is Illegal (Abji, 2013), that have gained momentum over the last several years. The field work for Third Eye Seeing was conducted prior to 2020, on the cusp of the COVID-19 pandemic and global paradigm shift. 5 Multiple academic perspectives from the social and health sciences, educational studies, and critical theoretical perspectives have led me to focus on the following overarching research questions: 1.2.1 Overarching Research Questions Part A: What are the ways in which Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can inform Canadian NursMed Education with a focus on critically examining settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice? Part B: What are the potential struggles and adaptations required to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies within Canadian NursMed Education in service of redressing intersecting health and social inequities? 1.2.2. Sub-Research questions To frame Third Eye Seeing inquiry in service of receiving participants’ stories, the project also includes 3 sub-research questions: 1. How do participants understand the potential significance of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies for informing and evolving Canadian NursMed Education? 6 2. How do participants describe the intended outcomes of current pedagogies for the practice of teaching, for student learning, for shifting knowledges, and for opening space to critically examine settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice? 3. What is the feasibility of adapting Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies into the long-term context of Canadian NursMed Education? What are some of the projected struggles? 1.3 Organization of Dissertation Chapter 1 is an introduction to the project and the research questions. Chapter 2 synthesizes key scholarly literature framing the context of the research questions. Chapter 3 details the theoretical perspectives that inform the Third Eye Seeing project. Chapter 4 details the methodology, research design based on critical ethnographic methods, and the analysis that took place during the study. Moving into the findings and discussion, Chapter 5 is a synopsis of the modern institutional features of Canadian NursMed Education as described by the research participants, that frame the context in which teachers may implement Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Chapter 6 outlines the complexities of applying Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in everyday classroom settings. Chapter 7 examines the emotional and spiritual toll of making an effort to braid Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies into Canadian NursMed Education. Chapter 8 is a discussion of the main findings, in the context of the synthesis of literature and theoretical perspectives. The chapter also concludes the main text of the dissertation and provides some suggested recommendations from Third Eye Seeing project findings. 7 Chapter 2: Synthesis of Literature 2.1 Context: Deepening Health and Social Inequities in Canada In the first section of this chapter, I review the implications of deepening health and social inequities for Canadian NursMed Education and the primary lens through which they are examined: social determinants of health. In the second section, I describe several lineages of pedagogies also typically employed to examine health equity: cultural diversity, cultural competency, and cultural safety. Scholars in the fields of education have been exploring the critical concepts informing the Third Eye Seeing research purpose and questions such as settler-colonialism and social justice. In the third section, I examine relevant themes from Canadian educational studies. In the fourth and final section, I briefly explore two significant genres of national policies that impact Canadian NursMed Education: Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and the Truth and Reconciliation (TRC) Calls to Action. 2.1.1 Current Evidence on Health and Social Inequities In Canada and elsewhere, many communities are experiencing increasing and inequitable risks to their mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual health. The empirical evidence for deepening health and social inequities range from population-based health indicators to personal narratives. Health indicators intersect across income level, racialized identity, ancestry, gender, sex, sexuality, religion, citizenship, ability, age, and more. Three notable examples emerge from recent literature with a focus on Canada. First, on a relative 8 scale, income related inequities are increasing in Canada, which impacts people’s access to health services, medicines, recovery programs, therapy, and health care in general (CIHI, 2016). Second, people who identify as women, girls, femmes, and non-binary continue to inequitably experience gender-based violence, which has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions (Cotter & Savage, 2019). Third, in the present moment, the health consequences of racialization are becoming more and more pronounced in the modern world (Anderson, 2006; Garner & Selod; Henry et al., 2017; Hilario et al., 2017; Igenoza, 2017; McGibbon & Etowa, 2009; Syed, 2020; Toronto Public Health, 2013). In this dissertation, racialization3 is lens to be included into the dialogue regarding the ongoing development of Canadian NursMed Education. Racialization refers to social processes, institutional cultures, and experiences based on constructed divisions between different groups of people according to skin colour, geography, language, religion, and/or ancestral lineage (Das Gupta et al., 2007). It can be noted that racialization is similar to, but not the same as the social construction of race and racism. In this dissertation, the concept of race is understood as a largely social construct that governs and is governed by the particularities of time, space, place, and historical context (Hankivsky, 2011, p. 13). In 3 Scholars like Anne Fausto-Sterling (2008) have debunked static links between cellular make-up and racebased patterns of health and disease. Using the case of two illnesses of the bones, osteoporosis and rickets, Fausto-Sterling demonstrates that the use of race as a static category to measure bone health and development “does scientific damage” (p. 683). Instead, she points to the need to study links between genetic regulation across the human life-cycle and the social, economic, political, and cultural factors that shape nature and our nurturing environments. Indeed, while in general people of different ancestral lineages vary on the spectrum of physical characteristics including melanin levels in skin, below the surface, contemporary advances in genomic science demonstrate that there are no significant biological differences between groups of humans based on the modern ethnic categories under which we have organized. In this way, “human biology has wrongfully been ‘racialized’” (Krieger, 2000, p. 212). As such, race and racialization are closely linked, though different. Racialization is "the process by which societies construct races as real, different and unequal in ways that matter to economic, political and social life" (Ontario Human Rights Commission, 2015). 9 Canada and beyond, 2020+ marked the daily use of race as an identity (e.g. Black, White, Brown, Red, Yellow) and the politicized application of these terms by media, activists, and researchers in Canada (e.g. Black Lives Matter, Whiteness, Brown Girl Magazine, Red (Indigenous) Power and Idle No More, Yellow Peril for Black Lives). Building on these social categorizations, racism is an interpersonal and institutionalized process in which people and communities face discrimination, oppression and differences in power based on their perceived race. From 2010-2021, there has been a resurgence of many social justice movements that invoke and challenge race-based inequities and racism. A review of literature on these movements reveals that communities racialized as Black, Brown, and/or Indigenous Peoples experience inequitable experiences of policeinitiated violence, representation in prisons, and forced displacement from land in the borders of Canada and beyond. These experiences impact their/our health and wellbeing, and influence treatment in the health care system (Kino-nda-niimi Collective, 2014; Maynard, 2017; McGibbon et al., 2014; Potvin, 2020; Reynolds & Robson, 2016; Waldron, 2018; Winnipeg Sun, 2013). According to leading scientists, health and social inequities are products of unjust, avoidable barriers to many necessities of life4. Deepening health and social inequities cut across the ‘intersections’ of racialized identity, ancestry, socio-economic status, ability, sex, gender, citizenship, religion, and sexuality (Ahenakew, 2011; Akbar & Panichelli, 2019; Barker, 2017; Browne, 2017; Crenshaw, 2020; Hill Collins, 2019; Kellett & Fitton, 2017; McGibbon, 2021; Muntinga et al., 2016; Reimer-Kirkham, 2019, Sen & Iyer, 2019). Recent 4 The necessities of life include access to health/healing care, clean water, nutritious source of food, affordable housing, spiritual practices, and a strong sense of self-worth and community. 10 reports suggest there has been minimal progress made in the last decade towards reducing the health and social equity gap in Canada (Block, Galabuzi, and Tranjan, 2019; Canadian Institute of Health Information, 2016). Events of 2020 and the emerging paradigm of the 21st century provide new hope for shifting narratives of health and social inequity in Canada towards peace, prosperity, sustainability, and collective wellbeing. 2.1.2 Health Equity and Settler-Colonialism in the Borders of Canada To move forward the health equity agenda in Canada, the Third Eye Seeing project review of literature begins by acknowledging the 500 year-long history of settler-colonialism on the land currently called Canada (Batacharya & Wong, 2018; Kino-nda-niimi Collective, 2014; Million, 2013; Reyonlds & Robson, 2016; Thobani, 2007). Until approximately 1492 ACE, what’s now hegemonically known as North America was habited en masse by diverse groups of Indigenous Peoples. Indigenous Peoples continue to live and attempt to thrive in the borders of Canada (Battiste, 2016; Martin, 2012; Sheridan & Longboat, 2006; Srikanth, 2010; Young Leon, 2017). My colleagues, mentors, and peers have taught me that many Indigenous Peoples maintain a caretaking relationship with land (rather than through the lens of property and ownership), paired with many specialized ways of surviving in and tending to different environments (Ahenakew, 2019; Battiste, 2016; Dechinta, 2015). Commenting on this relationship, Coulthard (2014) encourages a shift in focus, “from an emphasis on the capital relation to the colonial relation” (p. 10, emphasis original). An examination of colonial relations reveals the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual wounds of settler-colonialism in Canadian NursMed Education and beyond 11 (Ahenakew, 2019; Duran & Duran, 1995; Goodman & Kazimi, 2016; Mayuzumi, 2006; Nielsen, 2016). According to my analysis, research and practice suggests settlers from around the world have systematically marginalized and attempted to erase Indigenous Peoples’ epistemologies and ways of living on the basis of ‘racism’. This colonial movement has been recorded across ethnic and religious minorities around the world, and continues on today. In present day, communities designated as Indigenous Peoples, settlers, and arrivants5, are grappling with the symptoms and root causes of settler-colonialism in Canada and beyond. 2.1.3 Root Causes: Intersecting Modern Processes The literature reviewed for Third Eye Seeing suggests health and social inequities are the outcome of macroscopic structures such as settler-colonialism described above. As stated previously, at any given time in the modern period (~1492-2021+) a person’s and community’s birth, health, and death are in large part determined by their ancestry, racialized identity, income level, gender, sex, sexuality, citizenship, religion, spirituality, ability, age, and more. These ‘intersecting’ relations commonly listed above allow for nuance in the description of human experience. These intersecting relations are sometimes addressed in Canadian NursMed Education under the framework of the ‘social determinants of health’, 5 The term arrivant has a distinct literary genealogy. Vimalassery et al. (2016) describe, “In Transit of Empire, Jodi Byrd uses the term “arrivant” in order to “signify those people forced into the Americas through the violence of … colonialism and imperialism around the globe…”41 Arrivant, which invokes the title of a collection of poems by Kamau Brathwaite, provides another way to conceptualize the landscape of colonialism and Indigenous presence, overlaid in complicated ways with the practice of diaspora” (p. 2). 12 which are further explored in the coming pages (Hunter & Thompson, 2019; Raphael, 2016). The social determinants of health framework tends to use the language of income, employment and working conditions, education, childhood experiences, physical environment, social supports, healthy behaviours, access to health services, biology and genetic endowment, gender, culture, and race/racism, to describe the factors that determine individual and population health (Government of Canada, 2020). From a critical perspective, scholars of social justice describe colonialism (Dhamoon, 2015), neoliberal capitalism (Baru & Mohan, 2018), heteropatriarchy (Arvin, Tuck, Morrill, 2013; Barker, 2017; Combahee River Collective, 1977), border-imperialism (Gahman & Hjalmarson, 2019; Walia, 2013), and environmental extraction (Klein, 2015; McAdam Saysewahum, 2016; Waldron, 2018) as interwoven modern, macroscopic structures of humanity. Their writings suggest that these social structures manifest as everyday health and social inequities across the diversity of intersecting relations. Moreover, research and activism demonstrates how each one of the social structures inflect one another. Yet, due to many factors, the review of literature shows that a critical examination of settler-colonialism has been an understudied and under taught area in Canadian NursMed Education, particularly in relation to root cause of health and social inequities. To give one notable example, Jumah et al. (2013) conducted a survey of residents and program directors on Canadian obstetrics and gynecology departments which, “clearly showed that residents had a wealth of knowledge about disease-specific issues” (CIHR, 2021). When commenting on the study findings, Jumah shares, “but they didn't know why Indigenous women had worse health outcomes, and that's critical because that's where the social determinants of health factor in” (CIHR, 2021). In the Third Eye Seeing project, I aim to highlight the 13 integration of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education as one significant way to raise consciousness of settler-colonialism. This project is undertaken in service of redressing the root causes of health and social inequities. 2.1.4 Defining Settler-Colonialism According to a canonical text of decolonization theory, settler-colonialism is the process by which a group of people settle in an area; create surface level treaties about sharing space, boundaries, and the Earth’s bounty; and, then go on to do the opposite by systematically attempting to erase Indigenous Peoples’ relationship with land and life (Tuck & Yang, 2012). Settler-colonialism also views humans as the ego-center of terrestrial life, and therefore perpetuates the notion that humans have the right to control and dominate over land (Dei & Jaimungal, 2018, p. 20). This point is expanded upon in Chapter 3: Theoretical Perspectives. According to my analysis of the literature reviewed for this dissertation, settlercolonialism is a form of social, economic, political, and earthly colonization built on the principles of scarcity rather than abundance, which has implications for how health and wellbeing are conceptualized in Canadian NursMed Education. Cycles of colonialism have been going on for thousands of years and propagated by various groups of humans across linear time. In general, for much of the last 300+ years, Canadian NursMed Education has operated in parallel and in alignment with British and French settler-colonialism (Million, 2013; Reynolds & Robson, 2016). According to some educational scholars, standardizing curriculum historically allowed British and (less-so) French settlers and Canadian NursMed Education leaders to maintain dominant norms to 14 acculturate students and teachers into: “desired ontological, epistemological, and axiological frameworks” (Biermann, 2011, p. 391). The dominant norms can be summed up by the term ‘modernity’. As stated above, modernity encompasses the nexus of heteropatriarchy, neoliberal capitalism, and colonialism, the same social structures described earlier in this chapter (de Sousa Santos, 2019; Hill Collins, 2019; Mignolo, 2011). The structures of modernity influence and can create health and social inequities. In summary, settler-colonialism is an attitude, practice, and structure that aims to limit the possibilities of human flourishing through one narrow perspective, which is often enforced through violent means. Using critical pedagogies to unlearn settler-colonialism then necessitates an acknowledgement that in some ways ‘we have no idea what we are doing’ when it comes to imagining new pedagogical futures through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. In this way, integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education can support moves to “take the first step even when you don’t see the whole staircase” (Luther King, Jr. in Chopra, 2014, p. 73). 2.1.5 Preparing the Next Generation of Nurses and Doctors to Heal Root Causes The review of scholarship above demonstrates communities, health care systems, educational institutions and more are called to adapt to new paradigms of anti-racism, gender equality, redistribution of wealth, and living consciously of climate change. Research suggests the coming decades of communication, relationship building, unlearning, learning, and teaching in Canada can potentially support the evolution of our society and species towards social justice and sustainable relationships with the Earth (Kluttz & Walter, 2020; 15 Stein et al, 2020). Canadian NursMed Education is one significant area of practice that has the potential to evolve and adapt in service of redressing deepening health and social inequities. As an extension of the social welfare system and of settler-colonialism, Canadian NursMed Education prepares the next generation of nurses and doctors to provide essential health care to communities currently residing in the borders of Canada through particular pedagogies (Bhandal, 2018; Chiu, Duncan, Whyte, 2020; Duan, 2020; Hayman et al., 2020). As such, the pedagogies or philosophies of teaching informing Canadian NursMed Education have the potential to shape how patients, health care providers, and all Canadians experience health care. In this way, Canadian NursMed Education could serve as an upstream determinant of health. For instance, across the border, Washington state has passed into law a requirement for medical students to complete training in critical race theory prior to graduation (State of Washington Senate, 2021). At the same time, the surge in social justice movements is also facing opposition in educational policy. At least 20 US state Attorneys General are pursuing legislation that would essentially ban teaching concepts such as “critical race theory” in schools (Williams, 2021). The global events of 2020 provide additional evidence for advancing pedagogy in Canadian NursMed Education with a focus on decolonization and intersectionality (theories which are further explored in Chapter 3: Theoretical Perspectives). In this dissertation, I have chosen to examine Canadian Nursing and Medical Schools together as two institutions that educate the next generation of nurses and doctors. It can be noted that Nursing and Medicine differ in many ways. For instance, departments of Medicine tend to hold more power, privilege, and prestige in the university and society more 16 broadly. This has meant that Medicine typically receives more funding and resources for education, infrastructure, salaries and more. Also, Nursing and Medicine have almost binary gendered legacies, whereby Nursing has historically (until quite recently) been led by and occupied by women and Medicine has been dominated by men in settler-colonial Canada. While these trends are changing, the differences between Nursing and Medicine cannot be erased. Instead, the Third Eye Seeing project is meant to be an intersectional examination of Canadian NursMed Education with the understanding that in clinical practice, nurses and doctors tend to work closely together, especially in acute care and community settings. Moreover, the education of nurses and doctors represents an upstream determinant of health, whereby the examination and evolution of pedagogies in these two important fields of health professions can trickle down and influence patient experiences, health system planning, and policy. Finally, while Nursing and Medicine have distinct philosophical and practical differences, they share colonial legacies, a dominance of biomedicine as pedagogy (explored further in the coming pages), and histories of excluding Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour. Further research can be done on the two fields of health professions separately in more detail, to parse out the nuances of the Third Eye Seeing findings and contribution. 2.1.6 Pedagogies for New Paradigms of Canadian NursMed Education Extrapolating a definition of pedagogy from the historical and contemporary context is difficult. Simply put, many authors define pedagogy not just about the teacher-student interaction but rather a process of changing and facilitating learning during a world in crisis (Grande, 2015; McLaren & Jaramillo, 2017; Stein et al., 2020). Indeed, pedagogy is 17 political. hooks describes, “our work [as teachers] is not merely to share information but to share in the intellectual and spiritual growth of our students” (hooks, 2014, p. 114). In this dissertation ‘pedagogy’ is used in its broadest form and encompasses: the governance of Canadian NursMed Education; the buildings and land in which teaching occurs; the flow of people in and out of Canadian NursMed Education; the methods used for teaching; the emotional, mental, physical, and spiritual space created in Canadian NursMed Education; and, the written and oral knowledges shared between administrators, teachers, and students (Diffey & Mignone, 2017; Herzog, 2017; Oyewo, 2018; Adefarakan, 2018). In the third section of this literature review, I expand on the field of ‘critical pedagogy’ and the specific niche I am referring to as ‘Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies’. 2.1.7 Social Determinants of Health: A Primary Pedagogical Lens Research and experience demonstrate that health and social impacts of settlercolonialism have been historically taught in a ‘light’ way in Canadian NursMed Education. Most often settler-colonialism is coded into important pedagogies such as ‘social determinants of health’ or related fields of inquiry such as ‘global health’ or ‘culture and health’, which are discussed in subsequent sections and chapters (Bhandal, 2018; Clark et al., 2016; Huish, 2012; Premkumar et al., 2016; Wass & Mole, 2017; White et al., 2017). The social determinants of health (SDOH) are a framework influenced by critical social theory that considers how different levels of social relations influence peoples’ health (McGibbon, 2021; Raphael, 2016). However, from my reading, in the classroom SDOH can easily get taken up on a surface level, whereby health is seen as abstract and out of context from 18 modern processes (Baum et al., 2016; Baum, 2016; Goldblatt, 2016; Marmot & Allen, 2014). At the same time, the surface symptoms of settler-colonialism are usually taught in one course, scattered, or lost in an integrated and crowded curriculum whereby individual teachers are tasked with approaching the topics on their own according to their current sets of knowledges (Blackstock, 2018; Mills & Creedy, 2019; St. Denis, 2011). Canadian NursMed Education also experiences its own specific challenges as an institution. The majority of nursing and medicals schools in the country face the boundaries of crowded curriculum (Finnell et al., 2018; Weston, 2018), meeting accreditation standards (Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada, 2019; Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing, 2019), and ultimately fitting in all the skills required of the current Canadian health care system. This tends to maintain a status quo in the pedagogies of Canadian NursMed Education. Even when there is interest in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, students and teachers often do not have enough time, money, and talent recruitment capacity to go beyond surface-level understandings. In one literature review of health professions education, researchers find that approximately 0.5% of a student’s time in the classroom is spent on ‘cultural competency’ education in Canada, US, UK, Australia, and New Zealand (Spencer, 2015). At the same time, the structures of universities and institutional features do not tend to foster Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in classrooms and beyond (Dei & Jaimungal, 2018). Moreover, the clause of Academic Freedom can prohibit Canadian universities from being able to direct mandatory training for faculty or the mandatory inclusion of specific content (Sultana, 2018). As such, the majority of teachers in Canadian NursMed Education may not have the capacity to teach the complexity of settler-colonialism, modern processes, 19 and all root causes of health and social inequities. At the same time, the ancestral diversity of teachers in Canadian NursMed Education is reflective of modern processes (Henry et al., 2017). Due to the lack of training and/or lived experience there could be a major gap in pedagogical pluralism. This gap itself may reproduce settler-colonialism. The Third Eye Seeing project aims to explore this potential area of inquiry in scholarly knowledge. 2.2 Culture, Culture Everywhere: The Gravitational Pull of Culturalism In the previous section, I described how the social determinants of health (SDOH) are perhaps a primary pedagogy through which health equity is considered in Canadian NursMed Education. Culturalism is another primary pedagogical lens through which health equity is approached. In culturalism, culture is viewed as an unchanging characteristic inherent to a person or community based on where they are roughly (and usually in a lump sum) “from” in the world (Chircop et al., 2013; Hilario et al., 2017; Melamed, 2006). Research suggests the gravitational pull towards explaining topics through cultural differences is influenced by liberal multiculturalism, post-colonial migration, and settler-colonialism in the borders of Canada (Anderson et al., 2003; Reimer-Kirkham et al., 2002, St. Denis, 2011). Scholars suggest culturalism can work to divert attention away from the root causes of health and social inequities, such as settler-colonialism, and shift instead to cultural differences. For instance, writing in the Canadian high school curriculum context, St. Denis (2011) finds that multiculturalism approaches can serve to, 20 “enable a refusal to address ongoing colonialism, and even to acknowledge colonialism at all. This leads to the trivializing of issues, to attempts to collapse [Indigenous] rights into ethnic and minority issues, and to forcing [Indigenous] content into multicultural frameworks.” (p. 315) In this dissertation, I am interested in pedagogies that focus on critically examining how modern processes are implicated in health and social inequities. As such, I view culturalism as a pedagogy that may present a challenge to the integration of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. The literature review I conducted shows that ‘culture’ continues to be deployed as a proxy for assigning distinct biological and/or social attributes to people according to the processes of racialization, migration, colonialism, and more (Anderson et al., 2003; Carnevale et al., 2015; Dogra, 2010; Dogra, 2016; Etowa et al., 2011; Jefferies et al., 2019; Young et al., 2012). Critical scholars of health delineate that this understanding narrows culture to one point in time, and problematically perpetuates ‘culture’ as a catch all term to explain away the root causes of health inequities (Anderson et al., 2003; Reimer-Kirkham et al., 2002; Bannerji, 2000; Haque, 2010; Hilario et al., 2017). In the following section, I detail two commonly circulating pedagogies that are influenced by culturalism: ‘cultural diversity’ and ‘cultural competency/sensitivity’. I share brief insights from the literature on these two teaching philosophies. I also discuss ‘cultural safety’ in the context of where Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies may find allyship and space to be integrated in Canadian NursMed Education. 21 2.2.1 Cultural Diversity According to an expansive review of medical schools in Canada, cultural diversity training tends to have two inter-related meanings in Canadian NursMed Education (Dogra, 2010). Firstly, it refers to the acquisition of quantifiable skills, attitudes, and knowledge that facilitate positive interactions between ‘culturally’ diverse nurses, doctors, and patients (Dogra, 2010). In this way, cultural diversity tends to re-create problematic cultural inventories which present communities as static and unchanging. At the same time British and French Canadian ‘culture’ is often centered as a static benchmark from which all communities are distinguished (Thobani, 2007; Baldwin et al., 2011; Kluttz et al., 2020). Cultural diversity training may promote some self-reflection on how a person’s self-defined or researcher imposed ‘culture’ influences the patient’s context, life situation, health, and relationship with the Canadian health care system (Bednarz et al., 2010; Brown, 2001; Dogra, 2010; Nazar et al., 2015; Young et al., 2016). However, cultural diversity tends to stay away from the historical context and root causes of health and social inequities such as settler-colonialism. In this way, there is a gap in critical understandings of health and social inequities. 2.2.2 Cultural Competency and Sensitivity Cultural competency and cultural sensitivity are nebulous terms that are employed ambiguously in Canadian NursMed Education (Grant et al., 2013; Kohlbry, 2016; Sharifi et al., 2019). In general, cultural competency and sensitivity are considered a “set of academic 22 and interpersonal skills that allow individuals to increase their understanding and appreciation of cultural differences and similarities within, among, and between groups” (Spencer et al., 2015, p. 4). Here again, the notion of ‘cultural differences’ is used to explain variations in health and health inequities across physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual aspects. Leading scholars in the field have critiqued cultural competency literature and the approach to teaching students to go into a health care setting with already fixed assumptions about people who “look” like they ascribe to certain fixed cultural scripts (Anderson et al., 2003). I can share two empirical examples to illustrate this claim. In one case, Majumdar (2007) surveyed literature on cultural competency and South Asian women’s experience of marriage from the perspective of health in the United Kingdom. The author found the majority of articles tended to reinforce perceptions of violence and abuse existing in every South Asian marriage. Moreover, in the article Majumdar (2007) shows how much of the literature on South Asian diasporic women’s health and wellbeing in the UK in marriage, “served to support stereotypes of their passivity, and binary distinctions between supposedly ‘traditional’ and ‘modern’ women” (p. 316). In the review of Canadian literature, these stereotypes persist in the cultural competency and sensitivity training students receive. In another project, a research team in Canadian Nursing conducted a study on stereotyping in health care, which found that dominant assumptions about Indigenous Peoples in media and public discourse “negatively influence nurses’ interpretative framework” when caring for patients racialized as Indigenous Peoples (Browne et al., 2009, p. 170). In this way, cultural competency pedagogies can work to “pathologize” (Ahenakew, 2011, p. 14) communities based on biases such as racialized discrimination of what a person 23 is like based on their pre-conceived ‘culture’. In this dissertation, Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies necessarily move away from ‘culturalism’ and the use of the term ‘culture’, and towards nuanced and critical examinations of racialized identity, racialization, ancestral lineage, religion, and spirituality. 2.2.3 Cultural Safety Unsatisfied with the cultural competency model and the influence of culturalism, Māori nurses in Aotearoa (New Zealand), Australia, and South Pacific Islands have moved forward the practice and teachings of cultural safety6 (Ramsden, 1993). According to one recent article generated in the Australian context, cultural safety as a framework consists of “five concepts: reflexivity, dialogue, reducing power differences, decolonization and regardful care” (Mackean et al., 2020, p. 340). Through the explicit mention of power and decolonization, cultural safety acknowledges that any interaction in health care systems and NursMed Education can invoke the trauma, pain, and violence of settler-colonialism (Fernando & Bennett, 2019). In another article, the definition of cultural safety put forth includes the following statement, “cultural safety encompasses a critical consciousness where healthcare professionals and healthcare organisations engage in ongoing self-reflection and self-awareness and 6 It should be noted that cultural safety is often used alongside the term ‘cultural humility’ as well. For instance, one of the leading First Nations health care organization in the borders of Canada, First Nations Health Authority, recently launched the Cultural Safety and Cultural Humility Webinar Action Series (FNHA, 2016). 24 hold themselves accountable for providing culturally safe care, as defined by the patient and their communities, and as measured through progress towards achieving health equity” (Curtis et al., 2019, p. 14). As demonstrated by the use of the phrase ‘critical consciousness’ in the quote above, writing and practice of cultural safety draws on critical theories and practices such as postcolonial feminism, critical pedagogy, intersectionality, and decolonization, which are further explored in Chapter 3: Theoretical Perspectives. In general, the cultural safety model is a continuation of social justice projects led by feminist, anti-racism scholars from multiple positionalities, including members of the Third Eye Seeing supervisory committee (Anderson et al., 2003; Browne et al., 2009; Kurtz et al., 2018; Reimer-Kirkham et al., 2009, Yeung, 2016;). Taken up in the borders of Canada, cultural safety teaches students to consider the context of populations in relation to social, political, economic, and hxrstorical power relations that influence health (Anderson et al., 2003; Bourque Bearskin, 2011; Browne, Varcoe, Ward, in press; Kurtz et al., 2018). According to my reading the model has been taken up by critical scholars in attempts to frame biomedicine co-constitutively with Indigenous Peoples’ worldsenses7 on health (Curtis et al., 2019; Duthie, 2019, Milne et al., 2016; Nelson & Wilson, 2018; Penn, 2014; Varcoe & Browne, 2014). Moreover, the model has been applied in research and practice settings by leaders in the field such as Dion Stout (2021) who describe how the Canadian health care system can be “alienating” to Indigenous Peoples (quoted in Fitzhenry, 2021). The strengths of cultural safety in adapting and 7 The term “worldsense” and its significance for Canadian NursMed Education is explored in more depth in Chapter 3 (Oyewumi in Adefarakan, 2018, p. 233). 25 evolving the health care system and Canadian NursMed Education are clear in the empirical literature. In one example, researchers conducted a scoping review on the facilitators and barriers of cultural safety in Canadian emergency departments (Berg et al., 2019). The authors found that when perspectives of cultural safety were integrated into care patients of all racialized identities and ancestral lineages felt “valued and respected” (Berg et al., 2019, p. 4). In a second example, Guerra and Kurtz (2017) examine 26 articles that assess the cultural safety curricula and training offered by health professions programs in the borders of Canada. In general, they find that there is an increasing awareness of the importance of cultural safety in health care provision, especially in relation to diverse Indigenous communities. Although cultural safety is increasingly integrated in Canadian NursMed Education, Guerra and Kurtz (2017) find that there is not enough practice, time, and advocacy afforded to teaching about ancestral relations, learning and unlearning settlercolonialism, and other aspects of cultural safety. In this way, due to the constraints of a crowded curriculum and the discomfort associated with unlearning settler-colonialism, the criticality of cultural safety may be lost. In this way, cultural safety may provide one entry point to open up conversations about health and social inequities, however there is still significant need for philosophies of teaching such as decolonization and intersectionality to be integrated into Canadian NursMed Education. 26 2.3 Critical Pedagogies in Canadian Educational Studies In contrast to ‘culturalism’ as an entry point, the lineage of critical pedagogy offers insights into how groups of people are marginalized and essentialized8 by modern social structures such as settler-colonialism, heteropatriarchy, neoliberal capitalism, and environmental extraction. The social structures listed above work in conjunction with each other. As stated previously, in this dissertation, I focus primarily on the process of settlercolonialism in the geography of Canada, and the intersections of racialized identity, ancestral lineage, and spirituality in relation to the advancement of pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. Critical pedagogies in education (such as the anti-racism, feminist, LGBTQ2S+, and other intersectional education movements in Canada) attend to questions of who controls the conditions of knowledge production, the value inscribed within certain knowledges, and the ideological performances in classroom practices (Cavanagh et al., 2019; Cowden & Singh, 2013; Luke & Gore, 2014; Zebracki, 2020). Key scholars based in the US, Canada, and Brazil assert the importance of pedagogies that enable students to question and shape the meaning of what it means to exist as humans in a relational way (hooks, 2014, Giroux, 2011, Freire, 2000). They provide tools for undoing, explaining, and naming ‘injustices’. Criticality is premised on the epistemological knowledge that comes from understanding the marginalized groups in society, and the importance of social context and personal experience in the generation of knowledge. Falling into this broad category of pedagogies are authors 8 Essentialism is a framework that depict heterogenous groups as homogenous even though they are made up of “people whose values, interests, ways of life, and moral and political commitments are internally plural and diversity” (Narayan quotes in Matthes, 2016, p. 355). 27 who have written about the applicability of intersectionality to the theory and practice of teaching including feminist, queer, and/or racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour scholars, many of whom are cited in the pages of this manuscript. Through a review of literature, I also find that critical pedagogies been taken up by some scholars and teachers in medical education (Cavanagh et al., 2019; Ross, 2015; Sharma, 2019) and nursing education across the globe (Lynam, 2009; McGibbon et al., 2014; Dyson, 2017; Blanchet Garneau et al., 2018). Critical pedagogies clearly articulate the ways in which health is shaped, the social is constructed, and how power operates through the relations of racialized identity, ancestry, gender, sex, sexuality, class, ability, religion, spirituality, citizenship, etc. Critical pedagogies are an important vantage point from which to challenge hegemonic, paternalistic, and scarcity-based perspectives that reproduce health and social inequities across the globe. Indigenous scholars expand critical pedagogies to critique dominant pedagogies within Canadian educational institutions that have the potential of perpetuating harm, and suggest models for braiding in multiple worldsenses and scarring the “soul wound” (Ahenakew, 2019, p. 61). Building on the work of Alexander (2005), Ahenakew writes, “Today’s [hxrstorical] trauma is added to [hxrstorical], intergenerationally transmitted trauma, both reproducing dismemberment. This pain of dismemberment manifests on the Indigenous side as embodied practices of self-hate, disconnection, numbing, and checking out. On the settler side, it also manifests through different forms of numbing, including overconsumption. Both sides, however, are trying to respond in ineffective ways to the original pain of the soul wound” (2019, p. 61). 28 In Canadian NursMed Education, the soul wound manifests along the full spectrum of positionality in many ways. A critical investigation of pedagogies in my own life as a member of Canadian NursMed Education reveals disconnection by tuning out the root causes of health and social inequities, numbing by keeping my mind occupied, and overconsumption of knowledge to the point of exhaustion. The purpose of this dissertation is to turn and run towards the soul wound in service of healing the health of the collective and the Earth. I serve this purpose through a particular niche of critical pedagogy: Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. 2.4 Calls to Action Towards Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies The composition of faculty in Canadian NursMed Education can influence the approaches to pedagogy, and is representative of persisting health and social inequities (Henry et al., 2017). The makeup of faculty, of pedagogy, and curriculum in Canadian NursMed Education is being called to change with the rise of two notable movements across Canada: Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) (Henry et al., 2017; TRC, 2015). Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion is a commonly circulating discourse and practice that aims to expand the current demographics of teachers, students, and staff across racialized identity, gender, sex, class, ability, citizenship, age, and more. Recent movements have led to adoption of anti-racism language in universities as well. Yet, critiques of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI)9 point to the watering down of 9 In the final stages of writing the Third Eye Seeing manuscript, I have noticed a trend towards the use of Equity, Diversity, Inclusion and Anti-Racism (EDIA). I use Equity, Diverity, and Inclusion (EDI) and EDIA interchangeably. 29 explicit decolonial, intersectional perspectives which serve to maintain the status quo, and corporatized interpretations of critical perspectives (Dei, 2018). The Truth and Reconciliation Commission is an intervention into Canadian settlercolonial consciousness, with the aim to disrupt the violent and traumatic ways that settlercolonial institutions relate to and with Indigenous Peoples (Ahenakew, 2019; Arvin et al., 2013; Reading et al., 2016). All of the Calls to Action above demonstrate the need to investigate if and how Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can inform Canadian NursMed Education. In the following sections, I provide more details and insights into Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and TRC Calls to Action and their implications for implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. 2.4.1 Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and Anti-Racism (EDIA) The emergence of the policy term Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) (and now with the addition of Anti-Racism – (EDIA)) in Canadian NursMed education is one area where the practices of pluralism, multiple worldsenses, and social justice are being practiced and also critiqued. Just in the past few seasons there has been increased attention on Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and Anti-Racism especially as it pertains to the process of racialization, and the development of Canadian NursMed Education. A collective of nursing schools in Canada recently released the following statement, “Schools of nursing are uniquely positioned to play a leadership role in combating racism in Canada. As professionals, we are charged with providing the best healthcare 30 to all; care that is highly responsive to people’s social, ethnocultural or gendered locations. Nurse educators are called to create inclusive, non-racist environments for students and create curricula that equips nurses to ensure the delivery of equitable healthcare to all.” (CASN, 2020). Similarly, the organizational body of Canadian medical schools also released a statement along the same lines, “As the voice of academic medicine in Canada, we, the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada, stand against racial discrimination as well as all other forms of discrimination. The AFMC is committed to working with health partners to ensure that our environments are diverse, inclusive, culturally safe and foster equity.” (AFMC, 2020). Notably, both documents reference ‘racism’ and ‘racial discrimination’ as the current focus of their attentions, specifically in relation to Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion. These statements provide important context for the research questions and analysis in this dissertation. Notably, the publication of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and anti-racism statements from accrediting associations such as the Canadian Association for Schools of Nursing and the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada offer institutional legitimacy to the goals of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. However, the very nature of institutional legitimacy must be examined and critiqued as, “unexamined, seemingly benevolent practices tend to reproduce the same affective and 31 performative investment patterns that characterize colonial relations” (Stein et al., 2021, p. 20). In this way, the Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion can be applied in a conscious way by continually unearthing, scarring, and healing the “circular colonial process” through which Canadian NursMed Education and universities as institutions have been built (Stein et al., 2021, p. 23). One step in the path towards integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in conscious ways has been the diversification of Faculty members in Canadian NursMed Education, explored in the next section. 2.4.2 Composition of Faculty in Canadian NursMed Education One of the main Calls to Action among EDI literature and policy is to increase the number of faculty members racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour in Canadian academia. This has been a central focus of the work for the last 5 years in Canada, and especially in 2020+ (Gaudry & Lorenz, 2018; Henry et al., 2017). This particular avenue of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion work comes from a policy history of the Employment 32 Equity Act (Government of Canada, 1995), whereby some residents of Canada are legally divided two racialized groups: ‘visible minorities10’ and ‘Indigenous Peoples11’. A review of literature corroborates the claim that current Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion policies and practices aim to increase proportional representation of ‘visible minorities’ and ‘Indigenous Peoples’ in Canadian faculty, teaching approaches, senior administration, and more. At present, approximately 19% of people living in Canada identify as visible minorities, and 5% as Indigenous Peoples according to recent census data (Statistics Canada, 2015; Statistics Canada, 2018). Drawing language from the United States, the colloquialism of ‘people of colour’ is now often used in lieu of ‘visible minority’. 10 Visible minorities are defined by Statistics Canada as “persons, other than Aboriginal peoples, who are nonCaucasian in race or non-white in colour,” and as consisting “mainly of the following groups: Chinese, South Asian, Black, Arab, West Asian, Filipino, Southeast Asian, Latin American, Japanese, and Korean” (Statistics Canada, 2015). According to my analysis and experience, ‘visible minorities’ are residents of Canada who deviate from the aesthetic normal of it meant to be a ‘Canadian’ in 1995 when the Employment Equity Act underwent the last significant legislative change. Generally, these are members of the population whose ancestors were born (or they themselves) in modern countries ranging from Pakistan to Bolivia to Yemen to Zambia to Malaysia. Due to influence from across the USA-Canada national borders, more and more individuals are using the colloquialism ‘person of colour’ rather than ‘visible minority’ to identify their belonging to an “Othered” group (Said, 1985). Caucasian is the racialized legal term for people of European ancestry ranging from modern day Denmark to Poland to Ukraine to Portugal who, in news media and emerging research are all lumped into the racialized category of “white”. It should be noted that the term ‘visible minority’ does not include Indigenous Peoples. 11 On the term ‘Indigenous Peoples’: “Through the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, along with the International Labour Organizations’ Indigenous Peoples and Tribal Peoples Convention 169, “Indigenous Peoples” has become the global standard in terminology. While “Indigenous Peoples” is still an English phrase that attempts to encompass Indigenous Peoples across the globe, it succeeds in many ways that “Aboriginal” does not. First, by including “Peoples” after “Indigenous Peoples” it recognizes that there is more than just one group of Indigenous individuals. We’re not a monolith community, we’re a collective made up of many separate, sovereign, unique, and wonderful Nations. Second, the etymological meaning of this term is internally consistent. Indigenous Peoples comes from the Latin word indigena, which means “sprung from the land; native.” Therefore, using “Indigenous Peoples” over “Aboriginal” reinforces land claims and encourages territory acknowledgements, a practice which links Indigenous Peoples to their land and respects their claims over it. However, we recognize that “Indigenous Peoples” is not a perfect term. It’s still an umbrella term for a large group of people and it should only be used in situations where you are addressing all Indigenous Peoples groups as a collective. If possible, you should always use Nation-specific terms, particularly for territory acknowledgments.” (Animikii.com, 2020) 33 Established researchers who identify as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour in Canada recently published the findings of a longitudinal, comprehensive study on the application of equity in Canadian universities (Henry et al., 2017). Their extensive research reveals that the numbers of faculty members racialized as people of colour are almost representative of the demographics of Canada in some departments, and significantly lagging in others. However, their findings also show that Indigenous Peoples are disproportionately underrepresented in faculty, especially in senior administrative positions (Henry et al., 2017). There are also significant employment inequities (especially in relation to financial income) that members of groups racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour experience (Henry et al., 2017, p. 51). The scholars quantify some of these inequities into a “race tax” whereby “faculty members [who self-identity at Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour] end up with extra teaching, supervisory, mentorship, and service work…it is something that one cannot escape as long as they are employed” (Henry et al., 2017. p. 165). In this way, the study shows that teachers racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour are expected to do the lion’s share of work that the modern university refers to as Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion. This is especially the case, after the release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) Calls to Action, for Indigenous Peoples working in the institutions of Canadian universities (Elwood, Andreotti, Stein, 2019; Henry et al., 2017). At the same time that Canadian NursMed Education and all post-secondary programs are ramping up their attention to these important issues, there are some critiques of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion policies. These critiques have implications for understanding how Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies might be taken up in full or diluted in Canadian 34 NursMed Education. For instance, Ahmed (2012) who has been following the movement in the United Kingdom finds that the use of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion in universities “has been treated as a symptom of what academics have called the corporatization of the university” (p. 52). Here Ahmed is suggesting that these policies and practices do not necessarily approach health and social inequities through critical perspectives. Instead, they may reproduce some aspects of modernity (Ahmed, 2012; Ahmed, 2017). Leading scholars in Canadian educational studies echo this claim that Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion, “began as a reaction against affirmative action, and it was claimed that Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion provided a less controversial alternative. The expected benefits lie not necessarily in addressing system structures but rather in decreasing conflict and stress, enhancing productivity of heterogeneous teams or work groups, and improving morale, job satisfaction, and retention” (Henry et al., 2017, p. 179). In this quote above the authors also point to the overlap between corporate language and the intentions behind Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion. An excerpt from a research publication in Canadian obstetrics and gynecology illustrates how a focus on productivity and linear growth is presented, “Diversity and inclusion of people and ideas drive innovation and excellence. These are needed to continue to advance our field and support our patients, families, and reproductive community” (Maxwell & Lorello, 2020, p. 934). In this way, the language of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion may add to the complexity of integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies into Canadian NursMed Education. Cognizant of the 35 critiques, teachers in Canadian NursMed Education continue to explore dialogue and pedagogy through Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion as a Call to Action. 2.4.3 Truth and Reconciliation Commission In addition to the language, policy, and practice of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion, the Calls to Action from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission provide further evidence for the need to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. In the borders of Canada, the violent erasure of Indigenous Peoples worldsenses, the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the indentured labour of families from the Global South, and are just some of examples of the pain and scars inscribed on communities during the building of the Canadian nation through settler-colonialism (Million, 2013; de Sousa Santos, 2019; Reynolds & Robson, 2016). One significant instrument of settler-colonialism in Canada is/are the Indian Residential Schools (TRC, 2015). In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indian12 Residential Schools report was released. The TRC committee released the Calls to Action document which compiled knowledge from survivors, family 12 It should be noted that the term ‘Indian’, as in The Indian Act, or Indian Status Card, is still a legal category in Canada that does not refer to people like myself who come from the South Asian countries ‘East’ India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, or Sri Lanka that were formed after the fall of the British Raj in 1947 (Bhandal, 2014). Nor does it refer to people classified as West Indian who share another complex network of colonial relationships (Alpers, 1997; Donnell, 2018). Instead, the legal, racialized category of “Indian” refers to Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island (An English translation of the Cree word for the land referred to as North America) who are governed separately according to the archaic, colonial law titled The Indian Act. As stated in a previous footnote, in recent years, the language of Indigenous Peoples has been adopted in lieu of Aboriginal. Surprisingly, my review of the literature shows that there is a major gap in Canadian scholarship that adequately describes the interconnection of these Indian hxrstories and what they mean for Canadian NursMed Education. 36 members, community leaders, researchers, and more who made public the long history of violence and trauma inflicted on Indigenous Peoples (TRC, 2015). The TRC names several explicit requirements related to Canadian NursMed Education. In the space below, I share three of the Calls to Action that stand out as particularly necessary for Canadian NursMed Education: Call to Action 22: We call upon those who can affect change within the Canadian health care system to recognize the value of Indigenous Peoples healing practices and use them in the treatment of Indigenous patients in collaboration with Indigenous healers and elders where requested by Indigenous patients. Call to Action 23: We call upon all levels of government to: i) Increase the number of Aboriginal professionals working in the health-care field. ii) Ensure the retention of Aboriginal health-care providers in Aboriginal communities. ii) Provide cultural competency training for all healthcare professionals. Call to Action 24: We call upon medical and nursing schools in Canada to require all students to take a course dealing with Indigenous Peoples health issues, including the history and legacy of residential schools, the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People, Treaties and Indigenous Peoples rights, and Indigenous Peoples teachings and practices. This will require skills – based training in intercultural competency, conflict resolution, human rights, and anti-racism. 37 This momentous call for interruption into settler-colonial ‘business-as-usual’ can be attributed to Indigenous Peoples activists, scholars, and organizers alongside allies who continue to name the ongoing violence inflicted upon, and resilience of Indigenous Peoples communities across the globe (Chung, 2016; Million, 2013; Reading et al., 2016; Symenuk et al., 2020). Scholars suggest that the TRC stemming from the Indigenous Peoples vs. Canadian Government Settlement Agreement is perhaps one of most significant interventions made into Canadian consciousness in the last decade (Metallic et al., 2017; Reading et al., 2016). The TRC Calls to Action are another key piece of the educational context in which Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can be implemented in Canadian NursMed Education. The TRC process is one record of the “soul wound, a metaphor for historical trauma” that continues to exist in the land, people, and water that support and surround the borders of Canada that is a cause of health and social inequities (Ahenakew, 2019, p. 36). As I will further detail in the findings, it often came up as a pivotal point in which Third Eye Seeing project participants organized their teaching approaches, and understood the implications of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. 2.5 Summary In summary, Chapter 2: Literature Review detailed four central themes in emerging research to provide context for the Third Eye Seeing questions, design, findings, and discussion. These are: 1) Current data demonstrating deepening, intersecting health and social inequities in Canada and globally and the implications for Canadian NursMed 38 Education; 2) The gravitational pull of SDOH and culturalism as de-politicized pedagogies used to explain health and social inequities; 3) The relevance of critical pedagogies as a lineage to address settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice in education at all levels, and 4) Current calls to action in Canada, namely Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which provide further evidence for the need to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. In Chapter 3, I present the main theoretical perspectives from which the project explores pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. 39 Chapter 3: Theoretical Perspectives This chapter explores the main theoretical perspectives framing the Third Eye Seeing research questions and design. Namely, I identify: (1) critical theory, (2) decolonization, and (3) intersectionality as guides for research and pedagogy in the project. Drawing on the three knowledge areas aligns an analysis of Canadian NursMed Education with social movements aiming to evolve and adapt humanity in service of redressing health and social inequities. The chapter begins with a discussion of my lived experience in the social world - or positionality - as a health researcher. In the 21st century, scholars, policy makers, and youth leaders alike are reaching a consensus for each person to locate their/our positionality in relation to research, land, countries, and social identity in all settings. In Third Eye Seeing, I share my positionality for the purpose of outlining the assumptions shaping my worldsense as a researcher. Building on the literature review, Chapter 3 aims to provide the reader with a theoretical and practical context for Third Eye Seeing methods, findings, and analysis. 3.1 Positionality of the Researcher I have come to learn through the Third Eye Seeing literature review that every person is living with the health impact of intergenerational trauma as a result of human evolution over the last 150+ years. My health and perspective as a researcher is influenced by my intersectional identity as a woman, female, Punjabi, Sikh, addict, Canadian settler, Canadian citizen, millennial, and working-middle class member of capitalism. I was born and raised on Coast Salish territory in what is now Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. My maternal 40 lineage comes from generations of farmers living in small villages of modern day Pakistan. My paternal lineage comes from rural teachers and farmers in small villages of modern day India. My homelands in South Asia were essentially under British control for over 200 years during which my ancestors were subjected to unspeakable atrocities in the name of colonial exploitation and oppression. In 1947, after the resurgence of the Indian Independence Movement, the British Raj fell in South Asia leaving newly formed democratic states (Bose & Jalal, 2017). Known as Partition, borders were drawn in 6 weeks by British officials who had never visited the area, creating India (A Hindu Democracy), Pakistan (A Muslim Democracy), Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. My home state of Punjab, where the majority of the population identifies as Sikh, was divided into India (about one third) and Pakistan (about two thirds). Parts of it became modern-day Afghanistan as well. Millions of families were displaced from their homes and/or killed during these years due to the traumatic colonial process of dividing the region across religious lines. Political polarization fueled by traumatized masculine leaders continued to breed in the area after Partition. During the 1980s – 1990s+, Sikh religious minorities in Punjab began to immigrate to Canada in larger numbers compared to earlier times. The 1990s marked the opening of the Indian economy to ‘free’ trade across borders. In The Land of Five Rivers, Punjabi farming families experienced a mass influx of financial capital from companies around the world wanting mangos, rice, and wheat to be harvested from fertile regions of the Earth. After some years of wealth and exposure to neoliberal capitalism (Bhandal, 2014), the reality of land exploitation has set in. In 2020, accounts of village life passed down through my family 41 in Punjab are virtually synonymous with rates of intense addictions, cutting down trees, death by depression, and ghostly beings. In the 1990s, the meetings of Punjabi Indians and Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island also reached a critical mass. Though we share the English colonized name ‘Indian’, largescale immigration from Punjab solidifies my complicity in Canadian settler-colonialism as a Punjabi-Canadian. Through the use of land ownership, voting in the democratic Canadian political system, and participation in industrial work such as logging, my ancestors and myself reproduce forms of settler-colonialism in Canada. Through Third Eye Seeing, I aim to unravel the threads of my own complicity in settler-colonialism as a human, researcher, and Canadian citizen. I do this work in the hopes of repairing human relationships, finding moments of pleasure in the pain, and caring for the Earth. One gendered implication of the British Raj and Partition is the increase in arranged marriages between Punjabi women, men, and all genders for the purposes of survival. While arranged marriages exist in many societies around the world, the process took on a particular flavor after 1947. South Asia also experienced a bottleneck effect on diverse sexualities, and a Victorian imposition of purity. After an arranged marriage my parents moved to Metro Vancouver. They spent years in various forms of violence, disarray, and working low-income jobs like rewinding tape cassettes by hand, canning asparagus, and delivering pizza. Holding onto the intergenerational impact of Partition, I was able to survive childhood moving from city to city in Metro Vancouver through the joy of reading. Libraries saved my life and the lives of many diasporic children around the world. As a health researcher, I am acutely aware of how intergenerational trauma has been passed down and amplified over the last 60 years in the South Asian diaspora in Canada and beyond. 42 Many years later, I left home in pursuit of a biology degree where I began a position in a Faculty of Medicine in Canada, a settler-colonial institution located in Mi’kmaw territories. It was in this role where the ongoing impact of colonialism in Canadian NursMed Education became apparent to me. As part of my position, I worked with Canadian NursMed Education students who were interested in completing electives in what were/are referred to as the Global South (in contrast to the Global North), low-resource settings, and/or low-income countries (Sen & Iyer, 2019). The narrative tended to follow the lines of, ‘Canadian NursMed Education students, mostly racialized as white, go to poor countries in the Global South where they do not speak the local language to save sick and dying children racialized as brown and black’. In two years of research and practice, I noticed that the current format of education did not necessarily allow for teachers or students to question why the children were sick and dying in the first place, nor our (as in every single person on the Earth) own complicity in the colonial process of reproducing the image of a racialized Global South as always poor, with few resources, and in need of aid. A very similar narrative emerged after moving back to Metro Vancouver, Canada to support a family member through hitting rock-bottom of an alcohol addiction. While navigating the struggles of intervention, harm reduction, and recovery for family and my own self, I volunteered for many years at a women’s health non-profit organization, which I also identify as a settler-colonial institution. The organization is located in a village of Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh now called the Downtown Eastside. It is a village 43 home to many urban Coast Salish women-led actions, and opened up my worldsense13 to ways that settler-colonialism operates in Canada. From a university office to a community organization, I witnessed how biomedicine was almost always unintentionally and intentionally privileged over Indigenous modalities of healing when working with diasporic and Indigenous communities locally and globally. While these attitudes and practices are changing, my experience in the field of health and the experiences of my ancestors provide the foundation for asking questions about decolonial, intersectional pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. Scholars in knowledge areas of critical theory, decolonization, and intersectionality offer the theoretical tools required to engage in research and practice that can be responsive to deepening health and social inequities in the borders of Canada and beyond. 3.2 Critical Theory A main tenet of ‘critical theory’ is the assertion that power, privilege, and oppression are socially constructed processes experienced materially by our collective bodies, minds, and spirits (Butler, 1999; Dhamoon, 2015; Collins, 2002; Fanon, 1952; Million, 2013). For example, the passages on positionality above are critical readings of how the nations of 13 In this dissertation, worldsense is distinguished from worldview: “The term ‘worldview,’ which is used in the West to sum up the cultural logic of a society, captures the West’s privileging of the visual. It is Eurocentric to use it to describe cultures that may privilege other senses. The term “world-sense” is a more inclusive way of describing the conception of the world by different [ancestral] groups.” (Oyewùmí in Adefarakan, 2018, p. 232) 44 Canada, India, and Pakistan, are built through colonial, patriarchal, and capitalist powers led by particular groups of people in the last 150-500 years. Much of critical theorizing comes from deconstructing these processes, understanding marginalized (by ancestry, racialized identity, sex, gender, religion, sexuality, citizenship, class, ability, age, etc.) groups in society, and centering social context and personal experience in the generation of knowledge (Ahmad et al., 2013; Barker, 2017; Giroux, 2011; Haritaworn, Kuntsman, Posocco, 2014; hooks, 2014). Moreover, critical theorizing indicates institutions asserting power over individuals cannot be studied out of view of the modes of thought and political rationality that underlie their governance (Bannerji, 2000; Chakravorty Spivak, 1999; Foucault, 1980). Interestingly, I observe that in much critical theoretical writing about social processes, the actual felt experience of being in a body, mind, mood, and soul that absorbs, heals, and copes from trauma can be lost. This could be due to the constraints of ‘objectivity’ that are often a necessary requirement of conducting health research. Nonetheless, critical theorizing can shed light on how power, privilege, and oppression are expressed, signaled, reproduced or legitimized in the structures of health education, health care, and health policy in the borders of Canada (Anderson, 2006; Ahenakew, 2011; Browne et al., 2018; Etowa et al., 2017; Reimer-Kirkham, 2019). Feminist researchers have provided clear evidence for the assertion that power is inextricably linked to knowledge (Bunjun, 2011; Harding, 2016; Nader, 2014). Critical theorizing allows for articulation of how power permeates through people and institutions, and how power establishes hierarchies of knowledge (Andreotti et al., 2018; Ayeb-Karlsson, 2020; Jones et al., 2012; Tuhiwai-Smith et al., 2016; Yeang, 2017). In Third Eye Seeing, power is 45 examined in relation to pedagogy. The research questions are informed by critical theory to examine if Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies could gain more attention, impact, and ultimately power to inform Canadian NursMed Education. 3.3. Decolonization 3.3.1 Decolonizing Education In Third Eye Seeing, decolonization specifically refers to movements towards repatriating land and life to Indigenous Peoples (Tuck & Yang, 2012). Decolonization requires readers, students, teachers, and settlers, and more to “join us in these efforts, so that settler-colonial structuring and Indigenous critiques of that structuring are no longer rendered invisible. Yet, this joining cannot be too easy, too open, too settled. Solidarity is an uneasy, reserved, and unsettled matter that neither reconciles present grievances nor forecloses future conflict” (Tuck & Yang, 2012, p. 3). In this way, Third Eye Seeing aims to gather stories and share research findings to unsettle Canadian NursMed Education in service of redressing health and social inequities produced by settler-colonialism (Ahenakew, 2019; Elwood, Andreotti, Stein, 2019). According to key scholars, decolonization of Canadian NursMed Education necessarily requires giving back land to Indigenous communities (including that which universities are built on), pluralism in pedagogy, and a restructuring of social-politicaleconomic and education systems, to name a few of the actual practices to engage in. Moreover, decolonization as a theoretical and practice perspective necessitates greater emphasis on sustainability and braiding a regenerative, collective, healthy, relationship with 46 the Earth into Canadian NursMed Education. Especially in urban settings, current models of nurse and doctor led health care in Canada rely on resource extraction of human labour, plant medicines, fibers, and minerals essential to high-tech devices in the Global North from the Global South (Lugones, 2014; Mignolo & Tlostanova, 2006; Tuck & Yang, 2012). As a start, decolonization in research design can assume a futurist approach to knowledge that does not reinforce a hierarchy of knowledge between Introduced Northern/Western perspectives, Introduced14 Southern/Eastern perspectives, and Indigenous perspectives. However, as a product of settler-colonialism in Canada, this hierarchy currently exists in much of postsecondary education including Canadian NursMed Education. In response to the hierarchy, ‘Two-eyed seeing’ is a teaching passed down by Indigenous Elders and Knowledge Holders on Turtle Island. Quoting Mi’kmaw Elders Murdena and Albert Marshall, Martin (2012) writes: “Two-Eyed Seeing adamantly, respectfully, and passionately asks that we bring together our different ways of knowing to motivate people, [Indigenous] and non[Indigenous] alike, to use all our understandings so that we can leave the world a better place and not compromise the opportunities for our youth (in the sense of Seven Generations) through our own inaction” (Bartlett, Marshall, Marshall, & Iwama, in press, p. 11, quoted in Martin, 2012). 14 Herbalists Stephanie Morningstar and Shabina Lafleur-Gangji use the term ‘Introduced’ instead of ‘Invasive’ to describe species of plants that have travelled to a new geographic area to make homes in soil without being invited by the current inhabitants. Introduced plants are described as being in dynamic equilibrium with Native or Indigenous plants. I use the term Introduced here to suggest many of knowledge systems that currently exist in North America and even South Asia have been Introduced to the region in (often violent and colonial) ways. 47 In case of health knowledge, two-eyed seeing is often used to describe and acknowledge two major worldsenses that are used in pedagogy, curriculum, and institutional culture of Canadian NursMed Education: (1) Indigenous ways of knowing and (2) biomedicine (Ahenakew, 2011; Martin, 2012). Two-eyed seeing is reminiscent of much ancestral wisdom from around the planet that recognizes the need for humans to embrace differences, express compassion, and care for the health of the Earth. Researchers examining decolonization point to considerations of how to braid Indigenous Peoples knowledge (thread) and biomedicine (brick) sensibilities into Canadian NursMed Education (Elwood, Andreotti, Stein, 2019). This point builds on the concept of ‘two-eyed seeing’ (Martin, 2012). In other words, scholars, teachers, and activists ask: how can we make space for multiple pedagogies and worldsenses of health care alongside biomedicine? 3.3.2 Learning from Two-Eyed Seeing as Mi’kmaw Pedagogy There are several epistemologies that are required to ground Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies as they enter Canadian NursMed Education. Here, I foreground Two-Eye Seeing, a very significant intervention into Canadian academia from Mi’kmaw scholars Murdena and Albert Marshall (Marshall et al., 2015). I am currently living on Mi’kmaw Territories and am governed by the Peace and Friendship Treaty, and I am honoured to share the knowledges in service of upholding treaty relations and decolonizing where I am (Battiste, 2016). Third Eye Seeing is in radical solidarity and alignment with the 48 revitalization of Indigenous Peoples knowledges, and the consciousness raising practice of intersectionality stemming from African-American feminist movements. With this project, I am interested in creating synergies between diverse pedagogies in service of undoing settlercolonialism, health inequities, and making moves towards social justice. 3.3.3 The Significance of the Third Eye in South Asian Epistemologies The Third Eye, according to South Asian diasporic philosophies, is the imagination energy center of each individual person and collective consciousness. In my view, the Third Eye is a tool present in every being that catalyzes the generation of creative solutions to the daily demands on life, including health and wellbeing. At the same time, the Third Eye supports perceptions of potential futures to be created. Finally, the Third Eye can also open up possibilities for integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education that may not be obviously visible to the physical eyes. Indeed, scholars of spiritual health write, “to realize and understand this [we] need a Third Eye, namely, a power of perception and insight that enables them to grasp the meaning under the surface of things and phenomena” (Song, 2002, p. xi). In this way, the activation of the Third Eye can also support teachers and students in Canadian NursMed Education to go beyond surface level understandings of health and social inequities. This can allow for the imagination of innovative ways to encourage teachers and students to reflect on health through the lenses of settler-colonialism, health equity, and 49 social justice. In some respects, the current context in which the Third Eye Seeing project was conducted represents a perfect storm of social conditions to untangle and understand from critical perspectives in Canadian NursMed Education. 3.3.4 Synergistic Pedagogies Third Eye Seeing is in epistemological alignment and solidarity with Two-Eyed Seeing as a heuristic to use for designing, analyzing, and creating adaptive pedagogies for Canadian NursMed Education. At the present moment, there is a worldwide rise in consciousness about the symptoms of settler-colonialism such as structural racism, the extraction of Earth’s resources, and the divisions of value placed across borders of the Global North to Global South. All of these factors and fluctuating conditions have implications for Canadian NursMed Education. Notably, there are intersecting inequities to which teachers are responding (and must respond) with various pedagogical approaches. 3.3.5 Seeing through Multiple Perspectives (including Biomedicine) In general, the term ‘biomedicine’ has a long and contentious history around the world (Bode & Shankar, 2018; Engel, 2012; Hollenburg & Muzzin, 2010; Lock & Nyugen, 2010). To be brief, biomedicine represents the standard suite of science textbooks, examinations, tutorials, lab protocols, that each student entering and exiting Canadian NursMed education is expected to ‘know’. These topics generally include anatomy, biochemistry of the body, cell biology, organic chemistry, thermodynamics and physics of the body, pathophysiology, pharmacology, and overall health assessments. 50 In one of the most thorough anthropological reviews of biomedicine, Lock and Nyugen (2010), write, “the extent to which medical traditions other than those of biomedicine continue to flourish…provide incontrovertible evidence that biomedicine alone is not sufficient to meet the needs of the vast numbers of people'' (p. 62). Here Lock and Nyugen are describing how the complexity of modern medical knowledge interfaces with biodiversity, multiple perspectives and Indigenous Peoples medicines. At the same time, biomedicine – as enacted, manifested, and reinforced by NursMed - has connections to reproducing colonial logics in the borders of Canada and beyond. The roots of biomedicine can be traced to Enlightenment, Cartesian philosophy, which advanced the notion of the mind-body dualism (Lock & Nyugen, p. 90). On this basis, disease is defined as a biophysical malfunction and the goal of treatment is to correct the malfunction to cure the disease. This model stresses on the pathophysiology and altered homeostasis focusing solely on the treatment of the disease often with little or no scope for the role of intersecting power relations, nor the influence of mental, emotional, or spiritual states on bodies. At the same time, the tools of biomedicine have been used by colonizers to perpetuate violence and pain onto colonized subjects (Million, 2013, p. 135). The literature suggests that moves towards unlearning settler-colonialism, decolonization, and braiding will likely require more space alongside biomedicine for Indigenous Peoples’ and diasporic healing modalities. As such, the research questions focus on asking Third Eye Seeing participants about the potential significance of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies for informing Canadian NursMed Education, while also ensuring students have the practical and clinical skills to promote the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health of communities. 51 3.4 Intersectionality Writings from diasporic authors and activists such as Davis (2011), Thobani (2007), Bannerji (2000), hooks (2014), and Hill Collins (2002) have been and continue to be springing boards for the concept of intersectionality in the current borders of Canada, USA, and beyond. Intersectionality was born as an English term in the 1990s out of the work of critical ethnic studies scholars Kimberlé Crenshaw and Patricia Hill Collins who exposed the hegemonic ‘objectivity’, colour-evasive, racist, and gendered perspectives of US law, education, society and more (Crenshaw, 2020; Hill Collins, 2019; Hill Collins & Bilge, 2021). In recent writings, Hill Collins describes the following conditions for intersectionality as, “a lens for examining how critical analysis and social action might inform one another” (Hill Collins, 2019 p. 4). Intersectionality captures the fluctuating dimensions of health and social life experienced differentially by every person that are commonly understood to include ancestry, racialized identity, sex, gender, sexuality, socio-economic status, class, ability, age, citizenship/nationality, and religion. These correspond with modern human-made and temporal (or linear, time-dependent) structural processes like colonialism, hetero-patriarchy, neoliberal globalization, ableism, border imperialism, nationalism, and many more on various macro and micro levels. In the last decade, intersectionality is increasingly recognized as a framework that can be applied to every type of research method and field. In broad area of ‘health’ research, there are several articles and book sections elaborating on the ways intersectional theorizing, analysis, and practice can be taken up in the service of healing and addressing health inequities in Canada and beyond (Dhamoon & Hankivsky, 2011; Sen & Iyer, 2019). 52 In this dissertation, intersectionality creates space to go beyond a singular ideal or ideology of a ‘healthy’ person, towards a critical analysis of pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education (Akbar & Panichelli, 2019; Hankivsky & Mussell, 2018; Sewpaul, 2013; Waldron, 2018; Williams, 2017). Moreover, intersectionality has implications for understanding the diverse worldsenses of Third Eye Seeing participants. Finally, intersectional relations inform the range of knowledges, pedagogies, and people who are currently members of Canadian NursMed Education (Henry et al., 2017). In essence, using their personal experiences and positionality, authors of intersectionality theory opened possibilities of composing and communicating lived experiences, especially for people gendered and racialized as ‘women of colour’ (Brah & Phoenix, 2013; Raguparan, 2019; Sadika et al., 2020). Third Eye Seeing employs intersectional perspectives in order to make visible how participants describe and critically examine settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice in their own teaching practice and experiences. Moreover, the project aims to analyze which aspects of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies are foregrounded by participants as they describe the potential opportunities and challenges. 3.5 Summary This chapter examined key tenets of three theoretical perspectives that inform Third Eye Seeing questions, methodology, and analysis. These are: (1) critical theory, (2) decolonization, and (3) intersectionality, which interweave and co-exist in solidarity in the realm of research and practice. Each of the theoretical perspectives contribute knowledge, 53 wisdom, and evidence for critically examining settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Beginning with my positionality as a researcher, I shared a description of how my lived experience and practice in the field of health led me to ask the Third Eye Seeing research questions. Then, I summarized aspects of critical theory, decolonization, and intersectionality from a range of authors, many of whom are racialized and gendered as Indigenous women and women of colour. Authors who continue to pass down the three theoretical perspectives point to the power of storytelling and observation of social relations. In the following chapter, I detail the methodology and research design of Third Eye Seeing which builds on the analysis presented above. 54 Chapter 4: Methodology and Research Design Chapter 4 outlines the overarching research methodology and research design of the Third Eye Seeing project. The methodology and design are informed by the theoretical perspectives and my positionality as a researcher detailed in Chapter 3. I start the chapter by discussing the application of critical ethnographic methods in the research design. Then, I present a summary of the project setting, recruitment strategy, and participants. This is followed by a detailed description of the fieldwork. I aim to share a comprehensive account of how stories from participants were received, how observations were carried out, how data collection was managed, and how the analysis was conducted. After a description of the research design, key ethical considerations are reviewed. I then share a discussion of scientific rigor and credibility. The chapter concludes by examining some limitations of the research. The Third Eye Seeing project was funded by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Doctoral Award. 4.1 Methodological Approaches 4.1.1 Critical Ethnographic Methods In contemporary health sciences, ethnography is used by a diverse range of researchers to study peoples’ daily health and wellbeing in local, provincial, national, and global settings (Pink, 2016; Draper, 2015; Hamilton & Taylor, 2017; Hill et al., 2019; Miled, 2019 Reed & Ellis, 2019; Vannini & Vannini, 2020). From my reading, especially of 55 decolonization and intersectionality theories and practices, the epistemological underpinning of ethnography assumes that: social life is meaningful; people are social agents who are on a spectrum of self and collective awareness; structural social processes such as settlercolonialism, heteropatriarchy, capitalism, and environmental extraction can work to govern social agents; and culture itself is a dynamic and changing process (Adjepong, 2019; Davids et al., 2014; Kaur Takhi, 2018; Roman, 2017). Moreover, ethnography assumes that social agents within a specific field are knowledgeable about the rules, conventions, and evidence within their field (Atkinson & Pugsley, 2007; Ybema et al., 2010). The Third Eye Seeing project does not claim to be a full-scale ethnography of Canadian NursMed Education. As one of the geographical largest bordered nations by geographical size, interviews and observations at all nursing and medical schools in Canada were beyond the scope of this dissertation. As such, Third Eye Seeing represents one braid in the woven tapestry of Canadian NursMed Education. By critically examining the research setting, the project draws on ‘ethnographic methods’ at a smaller scale. Expanding ethnography through a ‘critical’ approach allows the researcher to engage in a process that “involves ideological critique and challenges the status quo of power” (Roman, 2017, p. 1). In education, critical ethnography builds on the principle of “schools as sites of social and cultural reproduction mediated through human agency by various forms of resistance and accommodation” (Anderson, 1989, p. 7). The lineages of critical ethnography aims to make visible and subvert power relations within the institution of research itself. Many scholars discuss how ethnography emerged, in part, as a research methodology to study “Other” cultures and nations considered outside of settler-colonial ideals of healthy humans (Johnson et al., 2004; Said, 1985, Shange, 2019). Indeed, some lineages of 56 ethnography have long histories of contributing to the reproduction of the civilized/native binary which influences deepening health and social inequities in Canada. In recent years, as the diversity of worldsenses in health research grows, there has been an emergence of critical ethnographic methods. Since the rise of postmodernist, poststructuralist, and postcolonial epistemological shifts in social sciences and humanities, critical ethnographic methods are used to “bolster growing cultural self-critique in the West” (Ybema et al., 2010, p. 350) and to document subaltern narratives of communities by scholars (Gunaratnam, 2003, p. 86). From decolonial, intersectional theoretical perspectives, the politics of location shape knowledge production and therefore ethnographic representations are situated locally, are partial to the writer, and are socially constructed (Parameswaran, 2001, p. 69). In this way, I understand that almost all research that draws on ethnographic methods has some qualities of ‘autoethnography’, which allows the researchers to position the findings in relation to one’s own stories, complexities of analysis, power dynamics, and uncertainties (Ashlee et al., 2017). In the case of Third Eye Seeing, I remained acutely cognizant of my own memories and complicity in coloniality by the very nature of conducting the study, writing up the results, and witnessing instances of settlercolonial reproduction. While all approaches to ethnography (like all other methodologies) are fraught with ethical and analytic dilemmas, contradictions, and tensions, critical ethnographic methods require the researcher to apply the approach of reflexivity. Feminist ethnographers have herstorically brought forth the concept of ‘reflexivity’ in which the researcher can “explicate positionality, increase accountability in research, and honor the goals and ideals of research” (Anthym, 2018, p. 183). Moreover, according to Davies, “reflexivity expresses researchers’ 57 awareness of their necessary connection to the research situation and hence their effects upon it.” (2008, p. 7). In essence, reflexivity puts forth the assumption that the identity, energy, and self-awareness of the researcher has an impact on the design, process, and analysis. My reflexivity as a researcher begins with “an understanding of the importance of [my] own values and attitudes in relation to the research process” and how my own “social background and assumptions can intervene'' (Hesse-Biber & Levy, 2007, p. 129). Moreover, by remaining self-aware and self-reflexive as a novice researcher and my own positionality, I can engage in a process of meta-cognitive thinking through which biases, contradictions, and surprises in the research can emerge. I engaged in the practice of reflexivity through various methods including journaling, peer debriefing (explored in Credibility of Analysis), holding ceremonies alone in stillness, mindfulness, meditation, and taking extensive jottings, and writing up field notes throughout the interviews and classroom observations. Further, I have learnt that critical ethnographic methods require the researcher to understand the everyday lives of the participants within the context of what feminist sociologist Dorothy Smith calls their “ruling relations” (1990, p. 74). These relations of ruling manifest as the doings of organizations, governmental processes, and bureaucracies and “constitute objectified knowledges” (Smith, 1990, p. 4). Canadian NursMed Education exists in the ruling relations of Canadian academia, settler-colonialism, and other processes of modernity. In an increasingly globalized world, critical ethnographic methods also require the understanding that the national and religious boundaries, racialized assumptions, and embeddedness of social relations have been destabilized (Chilisa, 2012; Gille & Riain, 2002; Maisuria & Beach, 2020; Miled, 2019). In this dissertation, critical ethnographic methods, specifically interviewing and participant observation, are employed with the aim of critiquing 58 modern processes and braiding Indigenous and diverse diasporic perspectives into Canadian NursMed Education. Yasmin Gunaratnam (2003) discusses examples and common themes of how the research setting is influenced by intersectional relations of the researcher and participants. A critical approach to knowledge production requires acknowledging that the research setting is a space in which social constructions of power play out (such as colonialism, heteropatriarchy, capitalism, environmental extraction, etc.). At the same time, when it comes to analysis of the research findings, the notion that a researcher’s identity and positionality will allow them to only have a partial understanding of people ‘different’ from them can be dangerous. This assumption reproduces epistemological belief about intersecting relations as binary, essential, and absolute. As such my intended use of critical ethnographic methods aims to work both through and against categories of difference. This principle is in alignment with my social justice goals of creating community across constructed lines of individuality. In my view, all researchers must remain vigilant about recognizing the colonial institutions within which we conduct research and teach, and work to unlearn the reproduction of settler-colonial relations. As Chandra Mohanty et al. (1991) writes “the existence of subaltern narratives in itself is not evidence of decentering hegemonic histories and subjectivities. It is the way in which they are read, understood, and located institutionally which is of paramount importance” (p. 34). Such a perspective seeks to methodologically and practically explore the historical, political, interacting, and fluid realities of pedagogy in Canadian NursMed Education. 59 4.1.2 Studying Up Another methodological departure point is the choice of research ‘subjects’ or participants. In this dissertation, I engaged in the process of “studying up” (Nader, 1972), a methodological tool from feminist research in the social sciences and humanities which ““take[s] into account participants’ position of power, professional status, and sphere of influence” (Aydarova, 2019, p. 34). I have never been enrolled in a nursing or medical school, and instead I am trained as a community care educator and herbalist. In this way, I am ‘studying up’ the hierarchy of health care providers in Canada. In Third Eye Seeing, the process of studying up allowed me to gain knowledge and insight into the education of mainstream health care providers, nurses and doctors, who hold the power of diagnosis, treatment, and the arrangement of biomedical health care for many communities in Canada. Moreover, as a graduate student, I exist on a metaphorically lower rung in the academic ladder. The project participants included administrators and teachers who are also faculty members within the university. On the note of hierarchy, Aydarova states, “one of the first challenges that a researcher has to consider is the problem of access, as those who occupy positions of power and privilege may be hard to access.” (Aydarova, 2019, p. 34). As stated previously, the pace of academia (and most work environments) has increased in the last several decades. Additionally, class sizes continue to grow in Canadian NursMed Education to meet the national and global demands for health care providers (Woloschuk et al., 2004; Russell et al., 2007). As such, faculty members often have competing priorities including research, teaching, and administrative work. In some cases, they may even continue their clinical practices. All of these factors culminate to influence how I as a 60 graduate student access the time and energy of participants, and bear witness to their stories and pedagogies as educators. 4.2 Research Setting The overall research field for Third Eye Seeing is university-based Canadian NursMed Education. The specific study sites included: 1) 1 Western Canadian University Medical School; 2) 2 Western Canadian Nursing Schools; 3) Virtual Sites through phone calls based out of Vancouver to interview participants at various Canadian Nursing and Medical schools. Each province or territory of Canada has its own nuanced histories and procedures for Canadian NursMed Education. In recent years, curriculum is becoming more integrated on a national level through the advent of digital technologies and standardized exams (Raman et al., 2019; Singh-Carlson & May, 2020). 4.3 Recruitment and Sampling The recruitment strategy for Third Eye Seeing was based on an extensive review of faculty member profiles on the websites of nursing and medicine programs in Canada based in universities. Based on the requirements of public institutions, the email addresses of faculty members were open-access. A detailed table was produced by province and territory, which listed key faculty members with interests in decolonization, intersectionality, health equity, settler-colonialism, social justice, and related fields of research and teaching. This list was then reviewed and supplemented by existing relationships with potential participants held by myself and the supervisory committee. The sampling strategy therefore included 61 ‘purposive sampling’ and ‘convenience sampling’ (Etikan et al., 2016). Purposive sampling was used to generate an extensive list of potential participants who were deemed knowledgeable in the research topic, and represented a range of worldsenses. Convenience sampling allowed for an accessible entry point into the field based on pre-existing relationships with colleagues (Etikan et al., 2016; Furrugia, 2019; Omona, 2013). Based on the research questions, I paid close attention to variations in ancestral identities of participants to ensure pluralism in the findings and analysis. Through guidance of the supervisory committee, I began to make contact with the identified list of potential participants working across the country in Canadian NursMed Education. An initial outreach email was sent to all potential participants, with a copy of the study summary attached. All participants who received the email and expressed interest to participate were subsequently provided with an informed consent document. We then scheduled a time to connect. As a small token of appreciation for their time, energy, and wisdom, all participants received a hand-drawn card, homemade herbal tea blend, and bar of soap from an Indigenous-owned company called Mother Earth Essentials by mail. 4.4 Ethical Considerations The field of academic research, especially ethnography, has been a contested site for critical perspectives such as decolonization and intersectionality. As such, considerations of ethical participant involvement and representation were at the fore in this research project. This was done through the conscious use of the theoretical frameworks which align with the goals and intentions of the project. Prior to beginning fieldwork, I also completed the 62 Canadian Tri-Council Ethics Tutorial and obtained ethics approval from the University of British Columbia Behavioural Research Ethics Board. The confidentiality of participants was held of utmost importance during the fieldwork and writing process. To ensure confidentiality, all hardcopy evidence of participation was kept in a locked filing cabinet that could not be found by the participants’ employers or colleagues. Additionally, individual interviews and observations ensured that study participants’ also remained anonymous to each other. Moreover, only the research committee and a hired transcriptionist had access to the de-identified transcripts and fieldnotes. A master list of participant names was kept and coded using numbers. All interview and observation data was coded using this master list. This master list will be destroyed upon completion of the research project. In the manuscript writing, gender neutral SikhPunjabi pseudonyms are used and identifying information about participants is limited so individuals cannot be identified in any written work that becomes public (including the thesis, conference presentations, and publications). This decision is certainly fraught with the challenges of representation and the politics of naming participants. Moreover, there is the potential for a flattening of the analysis based on the current reality of racialized polarization in the borders of Canada and globally. Ultimately, the pseudonyms are chosen to protect the identity of participants during a time when tensions and experiences of trauma are high, especially for teachers racialized as Indigenous Peoples’ and/or people of colour. Finally, clinical classrooms and practice sites were not included in the study. To truly receive informed consent from patients, family members, staff, and clinical instructors would 63 require significantly more time, energy, and meaningful relationship building than available during this doctoral dissertation. 4.5 Overview of Participants Here I describe the participants in the ‘sample’, their geographical location, and some components of their intersectional identities. I am purposefully vague in sharing demographic data about the sample of participants as the possible risk for participant identification is very high. This is due to the small pool of faculty members in Canadian NursMed Education who are not only interested but were actively practicing their educational skills in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Overall, participants in the Third Eye Seeing project included faculty at various university-based programs in Canadian NursMed Education. They were employees Canadian post-secondary institutions and were selected based on their knowledge on the subject of curriculum development, course structures, teaching experience, and ideas on teaching philosophies or pedagogies. Tables 1 and 2 below describe some demographic information about Third Eye Seeing participants. 64 Table 1. Interview Participants (P = Participant, Uni = University). P # Pseudonym Location in borders of Canada Central Program Years Teaching in NursMed Harpreet Faculty position in Uni (teacher or administrator) Both 1 Nursing 32 2 Manjit Teacher Western Nursing 1 3 Kulwant Both Central Medicine 23 4 Jagdeep Teacher Eastern Nursing 14 5 Manmeet Teacher Western Nursing 40 6 Jasleen Teacher Western Medicine 11 7 Prabjot Teacher Western Nursing 27 8 Kirpal Teacher Central Nursing 12 9 Akashpreet Teacher Eastern Nursing 14 10 Gianleen Both Central Both 9 11 Lavindeep Administrator Eastern Both 8 12 Simranpal Administrator Eastern Nursing 30 13 Tejbir Teacher Eastern Medicine 17 14 Kaladhar Teacher Northern Medicine 2 15 Gurneet Teacher Eastern Nursing 20 16 Arneet Teacher Central Medicine 10 65 Table 2. Observation Participants (P = Participant, Uni = University). Classroom & Topic P# Pseudonyms Position in Uni (teacher or administrator) Location in borders of Canada Program 1 17 18 Sukhi & Anandkaur Teachers Western Nursing 2 19 Manjit & Karmveer Both Western Nursing 20+ combined 5 20 Manmeet & Jassi Both Western Nursing 50+ combined 6 Jasleen Teacher Western Medicine 11 2125 Gidda Team (Online class) Teachers Western Medicine 50+ combined Indigenous Peoples’ Health 2 Indigenous Peoples’ Health 3 Building Relationships & Rapport with Patients 4 SelfAwareness and Reflexivity 5 Global Health Years Teaching in NursMed 30+ combined 66 4.5.1 Number of Participants A total of twenty-five (n=25) Canadian NursMed Education faculty members participated in interviews and observations (Tables 1 and 2). Faculty members that were interviewed spoke with me by phone to talk about Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education (Table 1). Some faculty members allowed observation of their physical or online classroom (Table 2). A few participants engaged in an interview and opened up their classrooms for study (Table 2). 4.5.2 Geography of Participants The project participants lived and worked across the borders of Canada (Table 1). The majority were employed at a university close to the 49th parallel (further broken down into Western, Eastern, and Central). Only one faculty member taught in a university considered part of the Northern region of Canada. All of the interviews and observations were conducted in English. Due to the cost of translation services, French-only programs were excluded. With the limited funding for the project, all observations took place in the borders of Western Canada. 4.5.3 Ancestral Lineages and Religions of Participants At various points in the interview and observational process, each participant was asked to share their ancestry in some capacity. To role model how this is defined, I phrased my own ancestry as Sikh and Punjabi from modern-day India and Pakistan. In response to this question, I received generous descriptions of where and how participants grew up, where 67 they did their own PhD, and how their ancestry influenced their approach to teaching. In the process, some participants also disclosed their religious beliefs, spiritual practices, and spiritual paths. This knowledge informed the analysis, however to maintain the deidentification of participants their ancestry or religion is not included in Table 1 or 2. Overall, it can be stated that participants represented Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island and diaspora from all regions of the globe (Global North/West, Middle World (Ansary, 2009), Global South/East, and Pacific Islands). 4.5.4 Number of Years Teaching in Canadian NursMed Education I also inquired about the number of years participants had been teaching in Canadian NursMed Education, which yielded rich feedback on the process of academic hiring, as well as stories of participants' movements across the borders of Canada and beyond. Participants ranged in the years that they had been teaching in Canadian NursMed Education, with a mean of 16.8 years. The newest faculty member was in Year 1 of their position when we met for the interview (Table 1). The most senior faculty member had been teaching for 40 years as a clinical and theory instructor (Table 1). 4.5.5 Genders of Participants Pivoting to gender, given the changing divisions of labour in nursing and medicine, the majority of participants were women (22) and only three (3) were men. With the emergence of multiple descriptions of gender in English, future studies could extend the 68 analysis to include non-binary, trans, and two-spirit perspectives in research on Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. 4.6 Data Collection Based on a proposal written with oversight of my supervisory committee, the research design was constructed to capture first-hand accounts of implementing and engaging with Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. Moreover, the choice of methods allowed for triangulation of participants’ stories with the researcher’s observations of pedagogy inside physical and online classrooms. The interviews and observations took place between January 2019 and October 2019. 4.6.1 Interview process In-depth interviews proceeded by phone using a call recording application paired with an additional Olympus digital voice recorder as a backup file. Most interviews were conducted for 60 minutes, though some variations in length were required based on faculty members’ schedules and capacities. The shortest interview was 20 minutes and the longest 90 minutes. Each of the faculty members shared their preferred phone number which was recorded into a password-protected, encrypted file. A few minutes before the phone interview, I found a comfortable place to sit, set up my notebook and interview guide, completed a 2-3 minute mindfulness meditation, and wrote down my reflections prior to the interview, to engage in a process of ‘reflexivity’ (further explored at the end of this chapter). 69 A meditation was done in order to center myself and ensure that I was open as a listener to receive the faculty member’s stories, then the interviews began. The interview guide (Appendix A) and questions were designed based on common pedagogies and contexts uncovered during the literature review process. Some examples of the interview questions include - If you were in charge of [NursMed school] curriculum how would you go about approaching the following topics: Ancestral diversity? Learning words or phrases in multiple languages? Immigration & Citizenship? Racism? Colonialism? - Can you tell me a little about how you see [NursMed school] as being part of ongoing settler-colonialism in Canada? - Health inequities experienced by Indigenous people and people of colour are growing. Given how “crowded” the curriculum is, how do you make space to talk about this in your classes? Prompts: How is it being done in [NursMed school]? What improvements can be made? What are the current gaps? - As you know, everyday there are more and more people immigrating to Canada from across the world. As globalization continues to happen, people tend to migrate along religious lines. This religious diversity is reflected in students, teachers, families, and more. In the interviews I’ve done so far, I notice that people are unsure or don’t have 70 space to talk about the connection between spirituality and teaching [Nursing or Medicine]. In your experience, how do you talk about spirituality in the classroom? The framing of the questions above is in line with in-depth interviewing techniques that “seek to understand the lived experiences of the individual” and that involve working with small samples of participants (Hesse-Biber, 2014, p. 189). The interview guide prompted the interview participants to reflect on critical pedagogies, their everyday approach to teaching, as well as pedagogies on an institutional level. I recognized that in-depth interviews tend to reflect the researcher’s assumptions about a research problem (which is informed by their positionality) (Deterding & Waters, 2018). As such, the interview guide and questions reflected the notion that settler-colonialism is an ongoing process in Canada, which has implications for approaches to examining social justice and health equity in Canadian NursMed Education. 4.6.2 Observation Process In the following section, I describe the process through which I engaged in participant observation. After initial contact, participants engaged in an informed consent procedure similar to the interview process. The educator was also asked to brief the researcher on the aims and objectives of the teaching in the class that was observed. For physical classroom visits, teachers were asked to provide a brief announcement at the beginning and identify the presence of the researcher. 71 Three of the in-person classes were held in typical university lecture halls: theatre style seating, students sitting in rows facing the teacher, and no art or windows on the walls. One in-person class was held in an Indigenous learning center with one wall of floor to ceiling windows, carved wooden posts and art work, and students sitting in pods around common tables. For all of the observations, I sat at the back of the classroom in order to observe the faculty members from the perspective of a student. I positioned myself to experience the classroom as “situated knowledge” that reflects the social, political, and economic contexts of Canadian NursMed Education (Simandan, 2019, p. 129). During the process of observation, I carefully documented the participants’ choice of words, activities, links to resources, and notes on their presentation slides. I also jotted down links to the literature as they emerged during the course of the observation. As per the intentions of Third Eye Seeing and the ethics application, I did not record any of the student’s comments, names, or assignments. However, I did take note on whether students seemed to be actively engaged in the pedagogies presented by the teacher. Notably, I witnessed laptop screens and whether they mirrored the teacher’s presentation or whether they were occupied with other course work or distractions like social media. The online course was delivered in an asynchronous capacity, meaning that I examined the course modules at my own pace in my own office. 4.7 Data Analysis The process of data collection and analysis was informed by a range of literature on critical qualitative methodologies, and guided by the supervisory committee who have 72 extensive experience with qualitative analyses (Anderson, 1989; Atkinson & Hammersley, 2007; Chilisa, 2012; Hamilton, 2017; Hesse-Biber & Levy, 2007; Kaur Takhi, 2018; Madison, 2011; Maisura & Beach, 2020; Parameswaran, 2001; Wilson, 2008; Ybema et al., 2010). More specifically, I conducted a thematic analysis informed by the concepts of ‘interpretive description’ (Thorne, 2016) and ‘colonial power relations’ (Gunaratnam, 2003). Both Thorne and Gunaratnam engage in research through critical realist epistemologies which, “reject positivist notions of causality…and argue that both natural and social sciences try to uncover the underlying structures of powers that affect the observable level.” (Turner, 2006, p. 440) According to Thorne (2016), interpretive description necessitates an analysis that is informed by “an actual practice goal” (in this case implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education), and “an understanding of what we do and do not know on the basis of the available empirical evidence” (p. 35). Moreover, the author suggests that thematic analysis aims to “extend the interpretive mind beyond the selfevident” (p. 35). At the same time, Gunaratnam (2003) describes the process of thematic analysis as an opportunity to “disrupt and reveal the limitations and the binarism of our use of conceptual categories [such a racialized identity, ancestry, and religion] in analysis” (p. 134). Both of these perspectives on interpretation of data were considered while engaging in the process of analysis. To begin, I read the interview transcripts and observational field notes line by line repeatedly and iteratively. This was done to identify recurring, surprising, and paradoxical patterns in the data. In this process of thematic analysis, key points and linkages to the theoretical perspectives were documented. Based on the initial comprehension of key 73 themes, a code book of topic-based codes was developed drawing on words and phrases used by Third Eye Seeing participants (Thorne, 2016, p. 144). A computer software, NVivo, commonly used to store qualitative data sets, was employed to code and manage the interview data. All observational field notes were recorded, read, and coded by hand. As the field work process continued, excerpts from the data were shared with my supervisor to discuss emerging insights on Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. Printouts of code reports and the draft code book were also read by the supervisor to “continually find ways to confirm or challenge the basis upon which [my] mind [made] linkages between the pieces and parts within the data” (Thorne, 2016, p. 158). As the analysis process continued, the research team remained mindful of how the participants accounts of pedagogies were “both socially located and in a constant process of individual production and negotiation” (Gunaratnam, 2003, p. 136) To refine the thematic analysis, summaries of interviews and observations were also shared with the committee members, who provided additional input on commonly circulating themes informed by the Third Eye Seeing research questions and purpose. As field work concluded and full-time data analysis began, the code book was further clarified and refined. In the final stages, the thematic analysis moved towards a more conceptual representation of the themes present in the data in relation to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. 74 4.8 Rigour and Scientific Integrity 4.8.1 Credibility of the Analysis Scholars identify several key techniques that are employed to ensure that the reporting of findings and implications for the field are supported by a strong research design (Amankwaa, 2016; Fusch et al., 2018; Liao & Hitchcock, 2018). In this dissertation, I applied the concepts of audit trail, thick description, triangulation, reflexivity, and peer debriefing to bolster rigour and credibility. To begin, following ethics protocol, I kept detailed recordings, jotting, and field notes during the entire research process. Amankwaa states, “an audit trail is a transparent description of the research steps taken from the start of a research project to the development and reporting of findings” (2016, p. 122). This included the raw stories and data, which consists of recorded interview audio files, transcripts of interviews, handwritten field notes pre and post interviews, and handwritten field notes of classroom observations. The audit trail also included preliminary memos, including potential common themes that began to emerge through the data collection process. Second, I intentionally included long excerpts from interview transcripts and observational field notes during the data analysis process with the committee and in the dissertation manuscript to establish a pattern of ‘thick description’ (Ponterotto, 2006; Williams, 2017). Thick description is often used to provide extensive accounts of the findings. In this project, thick description is employed to build and share a rich set of data that can be used to inform future research, especially as interest in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies grows in Canadian NursMed Education. 75 Third, I went through the process of ‘triangulation’ (Fusch et al., 2018) to examine the field from multiple angles. I employed “methodological triangulation” to examine the same events (pedagogy in classrooms) through multiple forms of data collection such as interviews and classroom observations (Fusch et al., 2018, p. 22). Moreover, I chose to interview and observe participants who existed on a spectrum of knowledge, positionality, and engagement with Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. This was done to ensure representation of participants with differing worldsenses. I also triangulated the stories and data by cross-referencing the changes in curriculum, the timeline for national Calls to Action, and accrediting organizations mentioned by participants in the field. Many of the events and changes described by participants such as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion movements are well-documented through research and journalistic evidence online. Finally, I also read the emerging findings in relation to multiple expert discussions including existing scholarship and the perspectives of the supervisor and committee members. Fourth, reflexivity played a significant role in the credibility of analysis, especially given recent calls to raise collective consciousness and self-awareness during the COVID-19 pandemic. Notably, “researchers' insights into their social location and participation in the research process have been used to examine the relationships between social contexts, research methods and intersubjective relations in research” (Gunaratnam, 2003, p. 87). To bring reflexivity into the dissertation manuscript, I approached the process iteratively by continually refining the questions, and revising the manuscript in multiple stages. During all stages of the design and analysis, I also remained mindful of how my own positionality influenced the research. 76 Finally, I also applied the practice of peer debriefing through the research study. Peer debriefing can be defined as, “engaging professional colleagues in analytic discussions and data interpretations” (Liao & Hitchcock , 2018, p. 159). In the proposal development stage, I formally consulted with two faculty members at the Social Justice Institute who are not part of my committee. I also regularly met with fellow graduate students, my peers, across interdisciplinary fields to discuss our hunches, research flows, and questions for further reflection. During the final stages of data collection and analysis, I began presenting stories and the preliminary findings at conferences including the UBC Celebration of Health Education Scholarship, the International Conference on Qualitative Health Research, and a workshop on Anti-racism Praxis in Health Professions Education. Questions and comments by fellow presenters and attendees helped to shape the final analysis and write-up. In the final stages of writing, I also contacted several participants to invite them to discuss an overview of my analysis, and the ways in which I was representing the findings through my framing of the overarching themes. The intent in inviting further dialogue with these participants was to establish further credibility of the analysis, and to explore whether some of the participants found resonance in how their stories are shared (Lather, 2007). In critical qualitative research, one intention can be to, “encourage the learning of both researcher and researched, sharing knowledge democratically, and fostering social action” (Lather, 2007, p. 3). At the same time, the feedback process allowed me to, “get the story right as well as tell the story well” in service of moving further towards decolonization and intersectionality in research (Tuhiwai-Smith, 2021, p. 357). The participants shared their positive feedback in relation to the overall 77 framing of the findings, and suggestions for analytical insights in the manuscript. In summary, drawing on documented methods of establishing credibility, I used the practices of audit trail, thick description, triangulation, reflexivity, and peer debriefing to establish rigorous and trustworthy research evidence on Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. 4.8.2 Limitations of the Research As with any research, a number of limitations emerged. Firstly, due to the constraints of participants’ busy schedules, the seasons of academia, funding, and the limited scope of graduate thesis work only 25 faculty members were able to participate in the study. In relation to the scope and notion of ‘saturation’, Thorne (2020) writes, “We often point our qualitative inquiry lenses toward expanding on existing understandings of clinical phenomena that matter, adding new richness, texture, and dimension to what is already known and understood about aspects that intrigue us. But rarely, I would argue, are we intending to claim a finding that deserves to be attached to the idea of saturation” (2019, p. 3). In this way, the limits of the quantity of interviews and observations were mitigated by probing the participants for in-depth, thick descriptions of their approaches to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Moreover, this dissertation is positioned as an exploratory project that can create opportunities for a longer and larger research program. A second limitation was geographical, where observations of classrooms were conducted in just two large Canadian universities. This was primarily due to the added difficulty of access to 78 professionalized programs such as Nursing and Medicine, and the funding constraints of travel within the borders of Canada. A final limitation is the project time frame. Perhaps fortunately, the fieldwork for Third Eye Seeing was completed prior to 2020. As such, the data collection did not necessarily capture faculty member responses to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, surge in social justice movements such as Black Lives Matter, Farmers’ Protest, and Indigenous Peoples’ advocacy for land rematriation, and the rapid evolution towards online teaching in most universities. Continued research on this topic can shed light on how teachers and administrators in Canadian NursMed Education adapt their pedagogy in response to global paradigm shifts. 4.9 Summary In this chapter, I began by presenting some key methodological approaches that defined the progression of this dissertation, including the lineage of critical ethnographic methods and the assumptions of studying up. I then detailed aspects of the research design, ranging from the research setting itself to the process of data analysis and storytelling. Finally, I shared the approach to establishing credibility, and some limitations that can be addressed in future research. It is with great excitement that I present the voices and observations of Third Eye Seeing participants, beginning with Chapter 5: Institutional Features of Canadian NursMed Education. 79 Chapter 5: “The Real Challenge is the System”: Institutional Features of Canadian NursMed Education The purpose of this dissertation is to investigate if and how Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can inform Canadian NursMed Education. Pedagogies are philosophies of teaching that inform how participants approached learning in the classroom. Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies stem from a lineage of critical pedagogy, which as stated in Chapter 2, are premised on the epistemological knowledge that comes from understanding the marginalized groups in society, and the importance of social context and personal experience in the generation of knowledge. To examine some interwoven braids in the current tapestry of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education, I had the honour of interviewing and observing faculty members across the country. In the following pages, I describe some common themes Third Eye Seeing participants identified as ‘institutional features’ that can act as barriers and facilitators to applying Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in their teaching practice. Canadian Nursing and Medical schools were largely set up as private-turned-public institutions starting approximately in the 1700s and grew in size, status, and biomedical rigour into the 2000s (Bhandal, 2017). According to literature reviewed for this dissertation, which reflected the perspectives of some Third Eye Seeing participants, Canadian NursMed Education hxrstories15 differ greatly across intersectional relations and geographies. When 15 Drawing in intersectionality theory, I insert a recent feminist contribution to academic writing. Instead of the commonly used English word ‘history’ which begins with the pronoun ‘his’, I invoke the term ‘hxrstory’ to suggest a gendered perspective on the establishment of Canadian Nursing (herstorically women-led) and Medical (historically men-led) Education. 80 asked how settler-colonialism is institutionalized, participants identified specific relational cultures and policies that govern how their schools are run. Participants pinpointed four ‘institutional features’ of Canadian NursMed Education that influence their capacities to implement Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies: 1) the organization of curriculum based on national regulatory association requirements 2) the ambivalence of colleagues to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies through the clause of Academic Freedom 3) the influence of Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action and 4) hxrstorical and contemporary patterns of student admissions. In this chapter, I explore excerpts from interviews and observational field notes that focus on these four institutional features of Canadian NursMed Education. A few notes on pronouncing Sikh-Punjabi names in English. - Basically all “a” sounds in Gurmukhi (the language on the modern India side of the border) are pronounced like the English “u” in pup and cup. - Almost all “o” sounds in Gurmukhi are pronounced like the English “oe” in Joe. - E.g. Arneet = Ur-neet, Prabjot = Prub-joe-t; - E.g. Kaladhar = Ku-lu-dhur; Jagdeep = Jug-deep 5.1 Accreditation and Crowded Curriculum There are organizations corresponding with each health professions program in Canada who are responsible for maintaining national curricular requirements, such as the Canadian Association for Schools of Nursing (CASN, 2015; CASN, 2020) and the 81 Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada (AFMC 2015; AFMC, 2020). In the interviews, participants16 used language such as “accreditation” and “strategic planning” to symbolize processes that schools undertake in order to achieve the expectations of their respective governing associations. Several of the participants reflected on the influence of accrediting associations on pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. While conducting participant observations in classrooms, I did not observe direct references to associations but rather viewed snapshots of how the recommendations are implemented at the everyday level. My analysis of the findings suggest that in the past few years, accreditation standards have become more specific, thereby potentially reducing the curricular flexibility of Canadian NursMed Education. As Kirpal, a teacher in Nursing put it, “there's going to be even less and less room as we march towards the tightening of the professional discourse called nursing.” For instance, Kirpal went on to describe the recently introduced US-based NCLEX exam, which undergraduate nursing graduates are required to pass in order to work as a Registered Nurse (NCSBN, 2014). According to several participants, the NCLEX focuses primarily on technical and physiological elements of nursing, with fewer questions concerning important considerations for providing care such as the positionality of patients and the social, political, and economic context of their lives. Kirpal further elaborated, “There's very little room in Canada. [There are] emerging perspectives that have a huge impact on nursing right now, and will for the third millennium, and nurses need to know this. And they have no idea. They're lagging two movements behind, always, 16 I interchangeably use the term teacher and educator, and specify when someone is an administrator. This is in part due to literary diversity, and the participant’s role and title in the university as detailed in Tables 1 and 2. 82 and that's because they're stuck having to get licenses and having to get professionalized and having to ascribe to a set of principles and procedures... So, I'm sad to report that it's really, really -- there is no room for these perspectives, these critical perspectives, and very important and necessarily ones, and it's always a reactive thing… There's no room for even linguistic decolonial thinking.” Kirpal’s discussion provides an example of how a top-down structuring of Canadian NursMed Education can dictate the direction of pedagogies. Students who graduate from a Bachelor of Nursing need to pass the NCLEX exam in order to receive the designation of Registered Nurse. Health authorities, who run hospitals and community health clinics are the primary employer of nurses, and base their wages and positions for nurses on the RN license. According to the discussion above, the ongoing professionalization of nursing may work to contract the amount of time and energy teachers can spend on working with students to understand and unpack Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies or what Kirpal refers to as ‘critical perspectives’. Instead, Kirpal suggested that in their school, Canadian Nursing faculty are being pulled in the direction of teaching to a US-based test. In some ways, the tightening of curriculum can be linked to the concept of “coloniality of being/power/truth/freedom”, whereby the very ontology of universities is premised on particular understandings of knowledge, power, health, and human progress (Wynter, 2003, p. 269). Based on Kirpal’s interview excerpt above, it could be suggested that diminishing space for critical perspectives in Canadian NursMed Education furthers institutional complicity in ongoing settler-colonialism. 83 Participants working in Medicine describe similar conditions for training new doctors. The interviews and observations reveal that in addition to the MD licensing process, Canadian medical students complete a 4-year degree and are then placed in clinical residencies, which are often specific to different components of the body as defined by biomedicine: eyes, throat, heart, skin, etc. In the efforts to instill scientific rigour, Kaladhar, a teacher in Medicine, recounted how the standardization process can sometimes work to in opposition to geographical and epistemological complexities in providing health care: “There’s this tension between context specific and the standardization of medical education. How do we walk with that so that we can create space for context and for different worldviews? Yet, at the same time the standardization is all about quality care and patient-centredness because that’s how it’s framed… We need to really continue to push the system to also make sure that it’s context specific as well… The accreditation in and of itself is very much kind of within the biomedical worldview. Trying to push accreditation at the same time as being open to […] create opportunities for other worldviews and other ways of thinking [that] still foster, you know, very, very competent physicians is challenging.” In this excerpt, Kaladhar found that the process of accreditation is in ‘tension’ with engaging with pedagogies that may suit their local social and physical geographies. They referred to context specific care, for which one definition is “tailoring practices and/or organizational policies and clinical guidelines to address the needs of local population 84 demographics, and social and community realities that often shift depending on local politics, epidemiological trends, and economic conditions” (Browne et al., 2015, p. 5). In their response, Kaladhar offered their experience of negotiating context specific care in their school’s curriculum compared to more general requirements prescribed by accreditors at the national level. Participants also recounted that crowded curriculum is a significant barrier for constructing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies within Canadian NursMed Education. For example, as witnessed in the participant observations, students and teachers spend a significant portion of their day in the classroom and/or on campus (8 – 9 hours days + additional hours for class prep, study, and reflection). In the following excerpt of my field notes, I describe the process of observing one teacher who was generous enough with their time to meeting me at the beginning and end of their workday to brief and debrief, “Manjit and I met quite early in the morning before the 9 am class time. By the time we met for a chai and stroll to the classroom, they had already been to their office to drop off materials, do some photocopying and review their lecture notes. The class itself was three hours: a guest speaker first, a short break, and then a workshop style class until closing. After the observation, I went to get lunch and write up my fieldnotes and expand on my jottings. At the end of the workday, around 5 pm, Manjit and I met at their office just to say bye, as I had been working in the same building. We chatted a little, and they mentioned they still had some work to do in prep for tomorrow. 85 On my way out, I noticed students set up in various lounges and study areas with laptops and snacks in tow.” (Participant observation, June 4th, 2019) In the narrative above, I document one participant’s present in their office as a faculty member from 8 am to about 5 pm (9 hours) with still more work ahead of them. In an observation of Medicine, I also witnessed a common dedication and expectancy in the pace of work. In the field notes excerpt below I documented my experience attending a first year medical school classroom that took place in the first few days of the term, “I am so grateful Jasleen was kind enough to allow me access to their classroom. As someone who has worked in Medicine, I know how many hoops and barriers there are to be in this position. So here I am! As I have never been to the building the class is held in, I arrived on campus early in the day to go find the room around 9 am. I noticed there were already teachers and students in the public spaces. The class itself started at 2 pm and afterwards I stuck around to finish field notes in the same building. Watching some of the students study until 5 or 6 pm (including myself), I recalled talking to Jasleen before the observation took place, and their comment to the effect of ‘my calendar is out of control these days, I’m happy if I can 86 cram in a granola bar between meetings and teaching’” (Participant observation, September 9, 2019). In my recounting of field notes above, the reader can see a similarity and invocation of ‘crowded curriculum’ in both experiences. Many participants had schedules similar to Manjit and Jasleen, and shared that they often still do not have enough space to address complex topics linked to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in nuanced ways. In reference to a new course on diverse worldsenses of health, Akashpreet a teacher in Nursing shares, “you can tell, you can sort of tell the students in your class who have somehow managed to get that course in.” The participant’s response implies the challenges of access to courses, and space for students to take courses addressing settler-colonialism, health equity, and/or social justice. To further illustrate the reality of a crowded curriculum, I share excerpts from participants about language diversity. A major component of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies is a critique and witnessing of how one thinks. The language in which we are taught, think, and communicate is directly linked to how one relates to patients and communities (Martin, 2013; Mayuzumi, 2006; Lopez, 2019). Kulwant, an educator and administrator in Medicine shared, “As you know, there’s a great tradition of medical knowledge in Indigenous communities to the point that for example in some of the languages there is a specific tense for healing where healing, you know, individuals that are medicine woman, 87 medicine man or elders will use this specific tense when they’re trying to heal a person.” In Canada, people speak over 200 Indigenous and/or diasporic languages as their first language making it one of the most linguistically diverse countries in the modern world (Statistics Canada, 2017). However, 80-90% of language diversity on the earth is expected to be lost in one generation (Brown, Brown, Mascarenhas-Swan, 2019). When I asked Third Eye Seeing participants who taught in linguistically diverse cities if students were encouraged to learn care work phrases in multiple languages (e.g. “does this hurt?”), the answer was a resounding “no”. The participant observations also revealed that all teachers taught and communicated in English, and very few aspects of the course (e.g. land acknowledgements, introductions, etc.) were communicated in another language. In many of the interviews I asked participants if they brought up the topic of spiritual plurality in relation to health, which scholars define as a key component of human life and healing for thousands of years (Ahenakew, 2011; Nahardani et al., 2019; Reimer-Kirkham, 2019). I felt that a discussion about spirituality, or even the concept of religion, could reveal how multiple worldsenses are discussed and imagined in Canadian NursMed Education. In response to a question about considering spirituality in the classrooms, Prabjot, a participant in Nursing answered: “No unfortunately no. Our textbooks do, I know in the assessment form in practice they do ask about ... they used to ask about religion but now they ask about ‘what spiritual beliefs do you hold’ or something to that effect but we don’t talk about it in 88 class. We do – let me correct this, we talk about it in Term 1 in the context of understanding the patient. So when you’re working with a patient, besides doing your physical assessments, what other aspects of a patient do we have to take into consideration? the cultural component, the language component, spirituality component and anything else. And then I think after that it’s a hit and miss, we really don’t unless it’s in the context of specific care for example maternity maybe, you know, spiritual beliefs around care of the baby or care of the mom perhaps. Death and dying is the other place where you may have spiritual beliefs around care of the body and the processes of dying, so that is brought to bear but to say specifically is there a course on it, no. Is the concept introduced and then it’s threaded through the curriculum depending on the context of care.” Over the course of the interviews, I noticed participants continually raised the issue of balancing the amount of teaching time available to encourage teachers and students to reflect on the context of health through the lenses of settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice. Rarely did participants’ relationship to cosmic consciousness, prayer and rituals, and other elements of spiritual health come up in conversations despite some significant probing. The Third Eye Seeing participants described trends towards large-scale, biomedically oriented standardization of Canadian NursMed Education nationally. Some participants suggest that making curriculum standard across the country can potentially work in opposition to pedagogical explorations of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. As the 89 findings above demonstrate, a significant determining factor for implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies is the correlation between accrediting associations, crowded curriculum, and the growing call to redress health and social inequities. Additional findings show that some teachers continued to bring their perspectives and practices of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies to Canadian NursMed Education whether accrediting associations mandate them or not. I will further elaborate on how participants engage in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Chapter 6. In the next section, I examine how they used their agency as members of public universities to integrate their political, philosophies, and pedagogical values with the rights granted to them by another institutional feature, Academic Freedom. 5.2 Academic Freedom in Canadian NursMed Education The principle of Academic Freedom is central to the ability of teachers to bring Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies and all forms of critical pedagogies into the classroom. As described in Chapter 2, Academic Freedom has a long legacy in the founding of universities and colleges as settler-colonial institutions of education in Canada. In theory, teachers have Academic Freedom which means they/we have the right to pursue learning, intellectual debate, research topics, and teaching philosophies without the fear of being censored (Sultana, 2018; Williams, 2016). As with any policy, the practical implications of Academic Freedom are subject to execution by senior leadership in relation to additional members of the university or college. Manmeet, a teacher in Nursing, described the doubleedged sword of Academic Freedom: 90 “I think one of the things about being an academia is you have so much academic freedom that if you are so inclined you have the scope to teach from an anti-racist perspective. But if you’re not so inclined there’s really no checks and balances to make sure that’s happening other than dictated curriculum. Which you know [NursMed] has not always attended to those concerns.” In theory, Academic Freedom affords teachers who are interested in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies the protection to teach from what Manmeet described as “an antiracist perspective” without being reprimanded by colleagues or students. This is particularly salient in relation to recent statements on anti-racism released by the Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing and Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada. In Chapter 7: Findings C, I elaborate on how some members of NursMed schools react to these perspectives in practice. Manmeet suggested that Academic Freedom supports teachers to instruct students according to the teachers’ own philosophies, at the same time as foreclosing possibilities for influencing others to adopt critical perspectives. Jagdeep, a teacher in Nursing also shared: “We developed a [new] curriculum in [year] and the goal was to ensure that we incorporate social determinants of health throughout the curriculum. So I’ve asked a few people how it is going and [they] said it’s not really going. I guess it has a lot to do with, you know, people … Maybe it’s what you call academic freedom. They feel 91 like they have free rein to teach whatever they want, but also some people are just not equipped to teach it as well.” Jagdeep had previously recounted how they used to teach a specific elective course on what pinpointed as the social determinants of health (SDOH), which they described as relevant to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in many ways. When their school went through the most recent process of accreditation, according to the participant, they “modified” their curriculum to fit the requirements laid out by the relevant regulatory association. In one of these moves, Jagdeep’s department attempted to spread out teaching and learning about SDOH across multiple classes. In the excerpt above, Jagdeep stated that instead of having more opportunities to engage in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, the school now has fewer opportunities. According to Jagdeep, due to Academic Freedom teachers who haven’t had the same training in critical pedagogies may not feel “equipped” to teach through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, which can create a gap in curriculum. This point links to Dion’s (2007) theorization of the ‘perfect stranger’, whereby pedagogy is “informed simultaneously by what teachers know, what they do not know, and what they refuse to know” (p. 331). Based on this quote and the interview excerpt above, some teachers in Canadian NursMed Education may not include concepts such as social determinants of health in their courses due to their own fears, reluctance, and/or pedagogical ignorance as conditions of the coloniality of being. Kulwant, a participant in Medicine echoed Jagdeep’s sentiments: 92 “It would be different, for example, if as part of the curriculum of your medical school you will have the Indigenous knowledge or global health as an important part where you will actually have a class every year that will allow you to be trained on those aspects… So I think that is, I think, the main issue. It hasn’t been incorporated into the main curriculum. So people that are interested, have some sort of affinity with these topics, you know, will gravitate to it, but it’s kind of on your own rather than being part of the mainstream” Here, Kulwant suggested that some teachers have an “affinity” to topics such as Indigenous knowledge and global health. However, they also found that these topics are not considered as part of the standard or “mainstream” curriculum. On classroom observation suggests recent trends in anti-racism movements, accrediting associations may suggest the integration of pedagogies such as Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies into their requirements for all courses (Table 3). A quote from my field notes expands on this claim, “Two of my participant observations were in new courses, created in the last 2-3 years, specifically addressing the TRC Calls to Action. In their own ways, the classes I attended explicitly unpacked the impact of settler-colonialism through the use of particular pedagogies. 93 I found that teachers would start by describing key theoretical concepts, then they provided examples from their own practice and/or life experience, and finally they asked students to reflect on their own clinical placements and/or learning in the program to date” (Participant observation. June 4, 2019; September 30, 2019). Here I noted how some Third Eye Seeing participants employed multiple strategies of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Notable, the teachers specifically centered pedagogies to critically examine the TRC Calls to Action and their implications for all members of Canadian NursMed Education. This point will be further analyzed in the next section, as well as in the following chapters. Some participants suggest that Academic Freedom blurs the line between Canadian NursMed Education as employers of teaching faculty on one side, and public institutions accountable to expressions of free speech. The grey area in between means that it remains unclear whether senior leadership can dictate training for their teaching staff. For example, Simranpal, an administrator in Nursing, shares, “I know there are some people in our diversity group that think we should make it mandatory that faculty do Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion training, and it is something I'm exploring. And what I’ve learned to date is there are very few things as a [member of senior leadership] you can make mandatory.” Here Simranpal raises one of the most challenging aspects of Academic Freedom. In the past 5 years, educational institutions and leaders are increasingly interested in creating 94 diverse, inclusive and respectful workplaces and classrooms where all people feel valued, heard, and safe. Yet, as the excerpt above demonstrates, senior leadership typically do not have the ability to authorize mandatory training for all members of their departments, which could support the intentions and philosophies behind Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Diversity and Inclusion consultant Cicely-Belle Blain explains how training can support organizations to collectively move past the initial resistance that comes with a more inclusive work and institutional environment (Blain, 2019). As the findings above demonstrate, Academic Freedom as an institutional feature can allow Canadian NursMed Education teachers the flexibility to decide what perspectives they are going to bring to their courses. The participants describe that ideologically speaking, Academic Freedom can protect them as teachers from censorship or interference from the government, the university, the college, the public and more. At the same time, they summarize that Academic Freedom can work to prevent advances such as Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Calls to Action detailed in Chapter 2: Literature Review (Blain, 2019; Maxwell & Lorello, 2020). In the following section, I examine how policies and actions taken at the national level in the borders of Canada do have the capacity to intervene in some respects to direct Canadian NursMed Education pedagogy. 5.3 Having an intervention: Responses to the TRC Calls to Action Indigenous, settler, and arrivant relations and reconciliation are where many teachers found themselves in the conversation about Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. Notably, Arneet shares, 95 “The real challenge in the system is to get the system to acknowledge Indigenous specific racism and that really remains one of the biggest challenges as far as I can see from my area” (Participant Interview, Mar 11, 2019). Many participants referred to the TRC Calls to Action detailed in Chapter 2 as one significant intervention that has challenged the settler-colonial institutions of Canadian universities. As noted in the previous section, some participants described how as a direct result of the Calls to Action their schools have implemented or are planning to design a specific course to support Indigenous Peoples’ health and braid Indigenous knowledge and modalities of healing into their pedagogies. In my view, this is a particularly significant finding given the challenges of introducing new, mandatory courses, especially in professionalized programs like Nursing and Medicine. The Third Eye Seeing course observations demonstrate that there are a plurality of facilitation techniques that can bring forward the TRC Calls to Action in Canadian NursMed Education in emerging courses. I observed how one teaching team restructured an entire series of lectures to mirror the 4 pillars of the TRC: Truth-Telling, Acknowledging, Restoring, and Relating. Another teaching team hosted their class with an Elder and a journalist in an earth-centered Indigenous learning center. The educators primarily used the practice of storytelling, compared to didactic style lecturing as a philosophy of teaching. Additionally, out of all the physical classroom spaces I visited, I felt the course held in the Indigenous learning center most embodied the essence of “land based pedagogies” (Wildcat et al., 2014). 96 In the interviews, many participants described how their school responded to the TRC. Indeed, the TRC Calls to Action provide a well-known reference point for participants to situate their pedagogical stance. For instance, Kaladhar, an educator in Medicine recounted, “The TRC is a self-reflection of what can we be doing better as an institution and so [NursMed school] engaged an expert panel of Indigenous scholars to do an environmental scan of how we’re doing, and what we could be doing better. So that we’re kind of always checking in with what are we doing, how are we doing, so that we’re never staying stuck in the institutional, oppressive structures” The participant suggests that the TRC process stimulated their school to engage in a process of self-reflection. Their leadership drew on the wisdom, time, and energy of a group of Indigenous researchers to provide input on where the program can improve. Akashpreet, a teacher in Nursing suggests, “in the last couple of years, since the TRC happened, we've been much more alert to settler-colonialism and been trying to think of ways to incorporate some of that learning and that knowledge into the course so that students are aware of it.” In another case, Prabjot, a teacher in Nursing, shares: “I would say now it’s our everyday language, but does it mean that people truly understand what it means? Is it just that some people are buying into the language because it’s politically correct to pursue this agenda? or have people truly understood that this is an agenda that we must pursue? 97 Like in the TRC…some people truly believe that this is changing times for us in education, in the work, in our society and some people think ‘oh it’s just, you know, a transition that will settle’, and we’re giving space for people to grow but nothing more can come of it. People don’t recognize that the TRC could change our policies in the communities and in the country that we live in.” The excerpt implies that Prabjot may have an ambivalent though optimistic perspective about the TRC. At first, they referred to the people who (ironically) think that current attention on the Calls to Action will die down and ‘settle’. Then, Prabjot went on to explain that in their view the TRC has the capacity to shift the entire consciousness of education, policy, and communities in the borders of Canada and beyond. Gianleen, a teacher and administrator in both NursMed, echoed Prabjot’s sentiment. From their perspective, the TRC has made available an abundance of wisdom that allows people to refer to comprehensive documents when implementing forms of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in everyday and institutional life - especially in relation to the impact of settlercolonialism on people’s health. In response to a question about their approach to pedagogy, Gianleen shared, “I rely on other thought leaders who have contributed to things like the Truth and Reconciliation Report. That's representative of international discourse among Indigenous people that informs the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of 98 Indigenous People for example, and the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples in this country that was released in the early '90s. So those voices and those stories inform who I am today, and they also inform my work. So I feel very grateful to the first wave of academics like Marie Battiste and Sakej Henderson and now we have emerging thought leaders who are blazing trails in the area of Indigenous health research. You know, Marie Kovach and Shawn Wilson and others. So I situate myself in my identity and my experience. I draw from my colleagues and I uphold the voices of Indigenous Peoples around the world through processes that I trust.” Gianleen’s discussion above indicates that they have leaned into the expansive collaborations alongside written, oral, and visual teachings made available through the TRC process. Their tone and choice of words signal that the TRC has created a larger knowledge base that can inform Canadian NursMed Education. An analysis of Gianleen’s quote above suggests that the TRC Calls to Action can be used as stepping stones for multiple pathways towards “decolonizing the mind” (Barker, 2018), pedagogies, and policy. In contrast, an excerpt from Jasleen, a participant in Medicine, suggested their caution regarding the outcomes of the TRC: “I am deeply skeptical about the TRC. The TRC is not a point of reference in my ongoing work around issues of colonial violence […] You know [Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples] was around 20 years ago. None of the goddamn suggestions 99 were ever followed through on. I’m absolutely convinced unfortunately the TRC will go the same way. So, I want to just be very specific that I don’t anchor my work at all in the TRC. I think it occasionally right now offers some convenient language through which to enter conversations that have been going on in this country for decades.” The participant refers to their “work”, which includes teaching, community engagement, and research. As Jasleen reiterated, conversations and practices of Indigenous sovereignty and rematriation of land has been happening since the early days of settler-colonialism in Canada and beyond (Tuck & Yang, 2012; Young Leon, 2017). In the past 150+ years, the material realization has grown even more complex as people from the Middle World, the Pacific Islands, and, the Global South/East migrate to Canada on the spectrum of full choice to full displacement (Ansary, 2009; Dhamoon, 2015; Klassen, 2015). On the note of global migration, Kirpal, a teacher in Nursing, responded to questions of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education with an example of how they experience doubt towards the possibilities of operationalizing ‘decolonization’, as described in the TRC. They shared, “it cannot be, you cannot decolonize. Like, basically, if you could turn back 500+ years, then that's decolonization. You cannot decolonize. Right?” Kirpal speaks of seemingly the impossible nature of erasing memories from the land. However, the TRC Calls to Action describe that some perspectives on decolonization can also take the approach of healing traumas, pluralizing worldsenses, and evolving into the future together. 100 Part of this evolution and adaptation, as outlined in the TRC, can involve a decolonization of our mindsets, health care, spiritual practices, and ways of being in relation to each other’s bodies. Through the mission of the TRC Calls to Action, I notice that participants refer to an increasing level of time, energy, and financial resources going into disrupting the didactic, secular style of education that has dominated Canadian NursMed Education pedagogies in the last 150+ years. To move beyond epistemological hierarchies, the classroom observations also show how some participants are braiding some ancestral traditions and ceremonies into their pedagogies, alongside more biomedically oriented courses. Some participants reported instances where they themselves and colleagues are bringing the practices of burning herbs, meditation, and leaving the confines of the physical classroom to go outside – which they name as part of Indigenous healing modalities - in accessible ways to their programs. Notably, while there are some mentions of the spiritual connections of these practices, I observed that they are engaged with in a largely secularized way. This raises questions and anxieties about where certain practices or even fields of research fall on the spectrum of cultural appreciation to appropriation. Notably, Manjit, an educator in Nursing, spoke of the importance of explicitly locating our own names and positionalities in the classroom in order to address this dynamic. As well as explicitly honouring the diverse positionalities of the authors, storytellers, healers and artists whose work we bring into the classroom. They share: “At the same time there has been a lack of recognition of positionality [of researchers racialized as White], their power in doing that work, and not explicitly naming that. 101 So when I go up I always say, you know, I’m a racialized [as a person of colour] settler. I was born in the [Global South] and I am here on Treaty [number] territory. I’m doing research with these groups and this is who I am. And I did not see that kind of explicit acknowledgement from all researchers working with Indigenous groups…That’s as explicit as their privilege, in saying I’m a white settler with a lot of privilege, with a PhD, working in a powerful institution and working with these organisations, these communities, and I give them money, you know?” The seemingly de-politicized, de-identified engagement of research and practice with Indigenous Peoples’, spirituality, land acknowledgements, and more is an emerging field of research inquiry (Hurley & Jackson, 2020; Ozano & Khatri, 2018; Shaw et al., 2020). For now, I posit that, in general, these findings illustrate how the TRC Calls to Action may be used to contribute to dialogue regarding the ongoing development of Canadian NursMed Education. In the next section, I pivot from examining barriers and facilitators of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies for teachers, to an institutional feature that can dictate the positionalities of people in classrooms, and the possible reception of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. 102 5.4. Who Gets to be a Nurse or Doctor? Admissions Processes The Third Eye Seeing participants describe how the receptivity of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education can be strongly influenced by the social locations and life experiences of students. Moreover, many participants connect social processes with the people who end up in classrooms. I observed that the presence of multiple screens and digital technologies may also influence the receptivity of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, which is further discussed in Chapter 7: Findings C. According to some participants, in the current conditions of Canadian NursMed Education, students’ perceptions of their own privilege can influence their capacities to pick up teachings from Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Akashpreet, an educator in Nursing, shares their experience of exploring pedagogies that support students to learn about their own privilege and unlearn certain ways of approaching topics in Indigenous Peoples’ health or global health: “And I've had similar situations where students have thought that for whatever reason okay, I'm going to write about Indigenous health issues or global health issues and they do it so poorly. You think what! no, none of that, just no, it's just not okay. And so that's a challenge. I then feel as if I need to go back into the classroom and sort of and try and talk about without belittling, with criticizing, without making, you know, anybody feel small to 103 sort of say, you know, this is so important to people's lives and way of being in the world. You need to bracket your privileged perspective or whatever perspective you come from. You know, maybe I need to bracket my perspective as well sometimes when I'm talking about things. But you need to get out of your head sometimes and stand in the shoes of the person who you're talking about in order to just fully understand what it is that you're saying. And that you recognize you're not hurting in your teaching. That's kind of a challenge. Encouraging, nurturing, mentoring student's young minds to recognize that their little, tiny kernel of a world, which has been so insular, is about to be blown to smithereens. And they need to be able to step outside of that in some way that is comfortable and not terrifying, to be able to sort of start to begin to understand other people's perspectives.” From another participant’s perspective, the conventions of medical school admissions prepare students to feel as if they are already incredibly knowledgeable and reproduce the image of a medical doctor as an all-knowing expert. Jasleen, a teacher in Medicine, explains: “If I could wave a magic wand […]I would fundamentally alter the way that admission processes look to medical schools and I would make it a lottery system. I would have no emphasis on the kind of rarefication of people who achieve the status of entry to medical school… People who are admitted into medical school in 104 [province/territory] their first lecture, the first sort of hint that they get about the next four to 10 years of their undergraduate education and residency is you are amazing. There were 4,000 applicants and you, you beat them all, you're special, you're amazing, you're into this culture and community that is, you know, hard fought for and is doing some of the most important work in the world, you're a winner. And that, to be really frank, makes me want to puke and it makes me want to puke because I think that kind of messaging is innately tethered to a colonial hierarchization of professions and careers.” Here Jasleen describes how medical students are directed towards an ego-centered mindset from the first day they enter the school. The participant then goes on to state the uncomfortableness and unease they feel with this model of pedagogy. Jasleen implies that putting medical students on a social pedestal reproduces hierarchies that situate medical doctors as the ‘winners’ of our society. The racialized aspects of admissions and mentorship are definitely one social relation that impacts the entrance customs and institutional culture of university-based Canadian NursMed Education. As I have discussed in prior papers (Bhandal, 2016, Bhandal, 2018), both medicine and nursing have hxrstories of excluding communities racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour from their schools, which in connection with other exclusionary forces, has hxrstorically meant little to no representation in senior positions in the profession. There are some teachers racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour who have carved their way into Canadian NursMed Education, and recent 105 anti-racism movements have catalyzed the hiring of more diverse teachers. Moreover, there are also strong allies racialized as White who have worked in solidarity to promote the representation, hiring, retention, and advancement of teachers racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour. The findings suggest that ongoing racialized hierarchies in faculty positions are examples of continuing settler-colonialism in Canadian NursMed Education today. For instance, many of the participants I spoke to were the only people racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour in their departments. The institutions are grappling with the implication of shifting demographics, economic disparities, and politics. In one participant observation of a virtual classroom in Medicine, I witnessed a slow uptake of critical pedagogies to address these complex issues in health and social equity. In a field note, I explained, “The virtual classroom I observed was broken up into 9 different modules. Each presented an important aspect of global health including: environment and climate, health systems and policies; and non-communicable disease. The information presented provided in-depth knowledge about methods of disease transmission, sanitation, and even how to conduct research. I could not help but notice the intersections of racialization and capitalism coming up in the visual and discursive elements of the classroom. Under the non-communicable disease module, the header image depicts children sitting in an outdoor classroom, 106 cross-legged on the ground, in a South East Asian or East Asian setting. The text also references high-income, middle-income, and low-income settings. In another module, the text and images create a clear picture that global health means that teachers and students from settler-colonial countries like Canada travel to ‘treat’ communities deemed under-served and/or poor, primarily in the African continent and islands, parts of Asia, and South America.” (Participant observation, September 12, 2019). In this way, the hierarchies described in the NursMed faculty in the previous paragraph are reminiscent of global hierarchies across the intersectional relations of racialized identity and socio-economic status depicted in the global health classroom. These observations are consistent with emerging evidence in the borders of Canada that show racialized inequities in academia, particularly across the intersection of financial compensation (Henry et al., 2017, p. 34). Student admissions and mentorship can impact who gets into Canadian NursMed Education, which then can determine who will become an educator in the programs. Stemming from their own personal experience as a student in nursing, Manjit, a teacher in Nursing shared, “I went into nursing and, like, fulfilled the stereotype of being a nurse [racialized as a person of colour]. What are the odds? It’s so amazing and just, like, so terrible. I just ... anyway, so that really ... that bothered me for a long time. And then now I’m actually really happy about that 107 Where I did all my schooling, I didn’t ever come across a teacher [racialized as a person of colour] in my program, even though so many are nurses or LPNs. We don’t see the same representation. And certainly I was never encouraged, in any of my programs, to pursue leadership. People of colour are socialized to fill the lower ranks, even in nursing.” Manjit describes how as a student racialized as a person of colour in a Nursing school, they felt that they were not mentored to follow a path to being a teacher and/or take a leadership position in their program. Here it is important to note the legacy of “whiteness” in Canadian Nursing programs (Puzan, 2003). As I have explored in previous writing, Indigenous Peoples and people of colour were largely excluded from Canadian NursMed Education for the first half of the 20th century (Bhandal, 2016). Though admissions processes have changed over the last 50+ years, Manjit’s comment above alludes to the continued racialized inequities within nursing schools and health care settings. Premji and Etowa (2014) found that nurses who identify as visible and linguistic minorities are underrepresented as Nurse Managers and Head Nurses, and instead are overrepresented as nurse aids, and in more challenging nursing fields such as long-term care and mental health (p. 82). Despite these challenges, Manjit, the Third Eye Seeing participant, goes on to say that even just in the last 5 years the approaches to Canadian NursMed Education admissions are shifting and adapting. For instance, leaders in the field have called on nurses racialized as white to move beyond performative activism and meaningfully engage with anti-racist and decolonial allyship in the field (McGibbon, 2014; Thorne, 2022). 108 Due to changing political agendas, expansion of patient voices and community involvement in health care, the impact of the TRC, and interventions by social justice movements such as Idle No More, Black Lives Matter, and No One is Illegal, the representation of students and faculty racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour may be increasing. Participants describe that nowadays some schools are taking affirmative action policies more seriously, with the aim to admit and mentor students from diverse ancestries. Lavindeep, an administrator in both NursMed described a program at their school that intervenes at the high school level, “the idea is to engage high school students to be involved in health programs in general because there is almost no representation of [people racialized as Indigenous and/or people of colour] in both [NursMed], and through that [our] work is to make sure that we increase the numbers, and we have a collaborative relationship with the community. We want to make sure that the policies for admissions for instance are equitable so that they allow a positive experience for the students to come on campus and be able to be interested in health programs… If a youth wants to be a doctor let’s say for instance, when they go to their doctor they never see a doctor who is of their background. So by engaging with the community and trying to promote such programs we’re trying…It’s a start I would say.” In this excerpt and in other parts of the interview the participant explained that in their geography, there is under-representation of nurses and doctors racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour. They recount how their office, which operates with an 109 interprofessional global health mandate, is making efforts to work with diverse students at the high school level to help prepare them to have successful applications to Canadian NursMed Education. From the perspective of an admissions committee member in Nursing, Simranpal explained, “Recruitment and admission policies to the programs are another thing that we’ve had to take a look at. And needing to realize that not every student that applies has had the same advantages, right. So it’s not that you're setting a separate standard, it’s that you're sort of recognising that students may not have had the opportunity to achieve a certain level.” Increasing the representation of teachers and students racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour in Canadian NursMed Education does not necessarily translate to a diversity of critical pedagogies such as Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Nonetheless, it does open up the possibility for collaboration, knowledge sharing, mentorship, and solidarity building. Kulwant, a teacher in Medicine described in detail, “The issue of diversity makes society advance to a greater degree in all areas of human activity, you know, and that is it really goes basically to the fundamental concepts of genetic diversity. When you have genetic diversity the ability to survive and ability to develop is much greater than when the genetic diversity is poor. And that is very specifically in plants for example or crops where one type of crop can be destroyed or completely wiped out by a specific infection for example of a parasite or climate, but a diverse crop that has really great genetic diversity is able to better survive all attacks of both nature and climate. 110 And it’s the same thing in the culture. Bringing diversity to teaching, understanding the reality of the world in terms of what happens and how that influences our own world and our own environment, is an important thing. It actually creates better physicians. Physicians that have an ample mind, that are able to recognize the value of different cultures, different races and different traditions are more effective physicians than physicians that will have a more narrow-minded approach to practice. In the end, you know, medicine is a profession of service and it’s a service to others, not to yourself and that’s one of the issues, you know, in terms of what type of people we choose to admit to medical schools. But overall, as a professional service, your ability to understand better your environment, to understand diversity, to bring diversity to your practice makes you overall a more effective physician and I think that has to be encouraged in traditional curriculums, in all health care professions from nursing to physicians and that is, I think, very important.” As participants like Kulwant consider the implications of conventional admissions processes, some describe how some students are also championing the cause of redressing health and social inequities. Harpreet, a participant in Nursing, discusses the interest and drive that some students have in their classes to unpack and address settler-colonialism in their learning: “It’s been really wonderful because it’s kind of come from the bottom up. So we had a group of [NursMed] students that attended one of the Canadian [NursMed] 111 Students’ conferences and they met a woman who did this beautiful experiential workshop…And they came back and they said [name] it was just so amazing. We have to have this here. Our students need this. And so I worked with them and we applied for some funding and they were successful. And so they brought [person], from [place] to [city], on several occasions to help the [NursMed] students really have that experience of being a member of an Indigenous village and going through colonialism…And then have conversations about how, in their future practice, as leaders in healthcare organizations, how they were going to try and establish relationships and use traditional values.” In the excerpt, the participant describes how some students are advocating and prioritizing the need to approach Canadian NursMed Education from the principles of decolonization, intersectionality, and health equity. Going back to admissions as an institutional feature of NursMed schools, the story above demonstrates how admission of students with an interest and passion for social justice can impact how teachers also engage with Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. 5.5 Summary Institutional features are factors that influence the environment in which teachers apply pedagogies such as Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies to inform Canadian NursMed Education. The main features that emerge from the interviews and observations 112 include: accreditation and strategic planning; Academic Freedom; TRC Calls to Action; and student admissions. Each of these elements is interconnected with the others and influences teaching philosophies. Accrediting associations can dictate which worldsenses on health, standards of practice, and curricular content are prioritized. Moreover, entrenched institutional conventions may influence the ideological and demographic make-up of the faculty and student body. At the same time, community and global movements, such as the TRC process, generate a public discourse that demands attention to issues of social justice in everyday pedagogies. The participants’ stories in the interviews, and observations of classrooms demonstrate the tensions inherent in the work of transforming how nurses and doctors are taught to provide health care. The logics of settler-colonialism seem to facilitate the management of Canadian NursMed Education classrooms which may privilege a single worldsense of health and education over pluralism. Within this context, teachers and students attempt to implement Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies with the aim of critically reflecting on health through the lenses of settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice. The interview excerpts and observational summaries in this chapter suggest that the participants are working within academic structures to: navigate, adapt to, and evolve the institutional features and modern structures; increase the representation of teachers and students interested in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, especially those racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour; and bring forward pluralistic modalities of healing. In some senses, I posit that Third Eye Seeing participants of all ancestral lineages are working to “understand and enact their relationships to knowledge and learning as acts of 113 a collective countering of coloniality” (Patel, 2016, p. 9). In the next chapter, I will explore some current efforts being undertaken within Canadian NursMed Education to actualize critiques of self, critiques of the collective, and the unlearning of coloniality in the classroom. How teachers incorporate, package, and deliver Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in the conditions afforded to them will also be discussed further in the following chapter. 114 Chapter 6: “We Need to Take Responsibility for Our Own Education”: The Complexities of Integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies In this chapter, I aim to feature an analysis of the participants’ discussions regarding the complexities of integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. I also highlight observational data which provide examples of how teachers’ attempt to engage these pedagogies in everyday settings. The interviews and observations took place during a particular period in time (insert dates), and across the participants’ various positionalities and teaching contexts in Nursing and Medicine. I share interview excerpts and fieldnotes that represent three keys themes: 1) circumventing culturalism as a primary pedagogical lens in Canadian NursMed Education; 2) the impacts of Equity, Diversity, Inclusion and Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action on the integration of pedagogies centering critical reflections of settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice, and 3) the participants’ attempts and strategies for engaging Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in practice. 6.1 Struggling with ‘Culture’: Circumventing Culturalism as a Pedagogy The findings presented in this chapter provide some evidence on the inherent complexities of approaching pedagogy through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. As discussed in Chapter 2: Literature review, over the past four decades of Canadian NursMed Education, the notion of differences in ‘culture’ as the route to discuss health and social inequities tends to be the primary entry point into dialogues 115 about Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canada (Bannerji, 2000; Reimer-Kirkham, 2002; Anderson et al., 2003; Haque, 2010; Hilario et al., 2017). Notably, I heard how participants negotiated and counteracted the ongoing gravitational pull towards ‘culturalism’, as they sought to focus on critically examining settler-colonialism, social justice, and health equity in their classrooms. To begin, Tejbir, an educator in Medicine, responded to a question about culturalism. The excerpt is illustrative of their struggles to get out of the trap of culturalism in Canadian NursMed Education, “I tried to write a critique of transcultural nursing. I’m sure you’re familiar with that theory. And I sent it off and the reviewers wrote back and said that they doubted very much that I had even read the articles that I was critiquing because I had missed the point. And I thought, “Oh my god.” Since then, I hate the idea of things like cultural competence because it’s like this checklist that we only apply to other people. It’s like a recipe book because if I know what somebody from Delhi likes to eat, then I will understand their culture or something…And yet we talk about cultural safety now and who gets to be safe, we decide what is safe. So I don’t like culturalism, I don’t like transcultural nursing theory. I just don’t think we’ve got it yet. I don’t think we have it figured out” (Participant Interview, Aug 9, 2019). 116 The participant expressively refers to the aversion they have towards cultural competence and transcultural theory, which they believe can often take a checklist approach to understanding how people’s diverse ancestries and geographical locations influence their health. An analysis of the excerpt suggests that popular theories in Canadian NursMed Education have the potential to position one group of people to be the cultural standard that “other people” are measured against, without understanding the structural components of health. Anderson et al. (2003) describe how critiques of culturalism can enable teachers and students to move away from, “exotic belief system of people from different ethnocultural backgrounds, and treating each group as a distinct entity, we are challenged instead, to examine the unequal relations of power that are the legacy of the colonial past and neocolonial present, and the ways in which the cultures of dominant groups have redefined local meaning, and dictated social structures, including health care delivery systems ” (p. 197). In this way, Tebjir’s story conveys a striving to move beyond culturalist understandings of health and social inequities, towards a “critical analysis of colonialism…and how conceptions of culture have been constructed within particular historical and colonial contexts” (Anderson et al., 2003, p. 199). Kirpal, an educator in Nursing also critiqued the concept of ‘cultural inventories’ to show the limits of culturalism and how problematic these common place heuristics are, despite their continued prevalence in mainstream curriculum, 117 “We have a [teacher who] did exactly that. Chinese people, there's a list. Indian people, here is a list. The Arabs, here is a list. This is what you look for—don't do eye contact, don't do that, don't do this. That was in the '90's, and it, and sadly it's still being taught. The degree to which I bring stuff like that in is to critique it, to say here's what we don't do.” (Participant Interview, July 12, 2019). In the excerpt above, Kirpal described some of the challenges of attempting to implement Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. From what I understand, the participant discusses how some teachers in their school continue to approach topics like health equity through fixed, unchanging beliefs about people from diverse geographies. To intervene, Kirpal introduces critiques of this way of thinking as a pedagogical strategy. Turning to another example, Manmeet, an educator in Nursing, recounted their first attempts to discuss the complexity of Indigenous Peoples’ health in the classroom, “I learned the secret to teaching from an anti-racist perspective in about [year]. I was at [school] and I was assigned to teach a course called culture and health. And I did it poorly and I got incredible backlash. I did a number of things wrong, the first thing that I did was I really tried to have diverse voices and so, I made a bunch of mistakes. I invited guest speakers. I wanted guest speakers [racialized as Indigenous and/or people of colour] and so on, but because the course was organized around health issues, it ended up not working very well… 118 This was not intentional on my part, but I invited a woman who was a diabetes educator and an Indigenous person to come and speak about diabetes. And I invited somebody who was on the HIV team to speak about women or speak about HIV and she was Indigenous. And so, I inadvertently ended up kind of aligning a lot of the stigmatizing health issues with Indigenous Peoples. And that created quite a problem, that was one mistake” (Participant Interview, April 4, 2019) In the excerpt above, Manmeet names how they used to have colleagues also who self-identified as Indigenous Peoples come in as diabetes and HIV/AIDS educators, with the intention of having people with lived experience talk about the topics. However, the participant very honestly shares how, in hindsight, it was a mistake to bring in guest speakers who shared knowledge on health conditions that were considered stereotypical of their racialized identities. According to the literature, Manmeet’s early attempts to support Indigenous Peoples’ health may have contributed to the ongoing ‘pathologizing’ of Indigenous communities (Duran & Duran, 1995, p. 21; Hutcheon & Lashewicz, 2020; Shields et al., 2005; Valencia, 2010). In the interview excerpt, I surmise that inadvertently pathologizing can take the form of continuously pairing guest speakers from specific communities with health outcomes that have particular social stigmas and negative connotations attached. In these ways, teachers, even those with intentions to find ways of helping students to grapple with the complexities of health and social inequities, run the risk of unconsciously portraying Indigenous Peoples as necessarily ‘sick’ without acknowledging colonial legacies 119 such as land theft, displacement, and epistemological erasure. The pathologization process can promote complicity in settler-colonialism by reproducing and reinventing trauma that is a direct result of colonization experienced by Indigenous Peoples (Linklater, 2014, p. 2). It has been shown that biomedical models of health in Canada continue to pathologize Indigenous communities (Ahenakew, 2011). Overall, Manmeet’s narrative illuminates the limitations and potential for harm caused by culturalism as a lens, and moreover, the potential for unlearning culturalism and evolving towards Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Early on in the fieldwork, I visited a newly offered class on promoting Indigenous Peoples’ health. Almost identical to Manmeet’s story above, a guest speaker came to share knowledge about health services provided by the Canadian health care system with and for Indigenous communities. The fieldnotes conveyed the following narrative, “The guest speaker is sharing really important information about the relationship between the Canadian health care system, settler-colonialism, and the role of nurses in treaty relationships. Their main focus is on outpost nursing in rural communities, where nurses have more autonomy over meeting community health needs than in a typical hospital setting. However, the lecture quickly turns to the impact of settler-colonialism on Indigenous Peoples’ health in quite a pathologizing way. Without highlighting the strengths, resilience, and practice of Indigenous ways of healing, the guest speaker lists pathologies of mental health such as ‘suicide’, ‘fetal alcohol spectrum disorders’, ‘drug abuse’, as common ‘diseases’ in need of health care. 120 I physically feel myself contract. I’m acutely aware of how family members cope and manage embodied trauma and violence with particular medicines. I wonder if the students are able to sense that part of the work of reconciliation is to unlearn violent ways of relating to our Indigenous neighbours and hosts?” (Participant observations, June 4, 2019). In the observations, I noticed how the examples they shared about nurses providing programming in rural Indigenous communities focused on the topics of taking one’s own life (worded as suicide), parents use of alcohol (worded as FASD), and some members selfmedicating using cannabis and additional medicines. As someone whose biological family experiences significant mental health differences and addictive qualities, I was particularly sensitive to witnessing these examples, as I know that people of all ancestries experience ‘suicide’, ‘FASD’, and ‘drug use’ in their families. In a recent paper, Gray (2016) discusses how framings of mental health, such as the one described in the fieldnotes above, can be used to legitimize settler-colonialism by “reinforcing stigma, myths, and stereotypes of Indigenous Peoples through the deterministic and fatalistic language of ‘mental illness;” (p. 81). Unintentionally, settler-colonialism can be perpetuated in the classroom through culturalism and the pathologization of Indigenous Peoples (Duran & Duran, 1995, p, 21; Shields, 2005, p. 5), drawing into question the limitations of conventional pedagogical approaches (Ahenakew, 2011). On a related note, I observed an online classroom in Medicine with a focus on global health. The following portion of fieldnotes describe a visual narrative being conveyed in the classroom through photos, videos, and text, 121 “Many of my colleagues committed to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies state the importance of crediting artists, writers, storytellers, content creators in our teaching practice. Yet, I notice that none of the images list the name of the photographer or indicate the positionality of people in the photos. Moving past the missing captions, I start off on the maternal and child health page. First image: two young adult women racialized as White look over at two girls racialized as Brown (not sure where they are, could be somewhere in South Asia?) who are not wearing shoes and reading a book written in English. They sit on steps made of cracked concrete. Second image: one young adult woman racialized as White wears a tank top, shorts, and runners while holding a piece of paper and pen in her hand. She looks like she is engaged in conversation with an older woman racialized as Brown (maybe from South America) wearing a long skirt, layers of fabric, with a somber expression. Almost every single page of the course goes on to look like this” (Participant observation, September 12, 2019). In the observation above, the gravitational pull towards culturalism comes through the implication that people in the Global South/East are poor, unclean, and in need of intervention from the Global North/West. In this way, the classroom is “inscribed by 122 colonial constructions of the non-Western “other” and the Western self…that underpins popular discourses on culture” (Reimer-Kirkham et al., 2002, p. 224). I suggest that the choice of images reveal a subtle story about global power relations and health equity. To further this point, from their experience in the classroom, Harpreet, a teacher in Nursing, shared, "Students really talk about why it’s really important to learn and, kind of, navigate how to communicate with someone who comes from a different culture than your own, and that the patient is the only one who could declare that yes, that was a culturally safe encounter. But I’m still ... I still kind of think of the responses as a little bit naive, because although they might say, you know, one size does not fit all, they make a lot of assumptions based on what they’ve read in the textbooks. Students say they’d like to have more information about various cultures ... so parts of me thinks that they’re still looking at cultural safety from an essentialist point of view” (Participant Interview, April 18, 2019). Here Harpreet brings up the notion of essentialism17 and cultural safety. As defined in Chapter 2, cultural safety emerges from a lineage of Māori nurses who critically examine power relations in health care settings. In a review of the excerpt, I believe Harpreet is 17 Essentialism is a framework that depict heterogenous groups as homogenous even though they are made up of “people whose values, interests, ways of life, and moral and political commitments are internally plural and diversity” (Narayan quotes in Matthes, 2016, p. 355). 123 suggesting that despite their critical pedagogical efforts to go beyond cultural essentialism, often textbooks and course materials can reinforce a static understanding of culture. As such, the interplay of lectures, textbook readings, online learning modules, and clinical placements can increase the complexity of implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. To counteract the pull towards culturalism in their pedagogy, Jasleen, a teacher in Medicine, shared their approach to clinical placements, “So, they are not allowed to prepare, they’re not allowed to go in with their happy smiling anti-type 2 Diabetes smoking cessation, yoga practice, healthy dietary, medical student expertise. They’re not allowed to do any of that. They go in specifically not knowing anything and very poorly prepared. This causes no end of panic and anxiety for a bunch of principally white, often racialized of colour, but definitely not Indigenous Type A medical students from across the province. They are worried shitless and that’s great, that’s actually part of the process in my mind pedagogically of sort of unhinging them from their comfortable position of expertise which often involves pathologizing Indigenous people in communities ambivalently or unconsciously even. In my mind, that is how power accrues, it’s how things like patriarchy accrues, it’s how heteronormativity accrues. It accrues by offering itself as a logical coherent set 124 of structures and systems. So, to unravel that is actually to come at all of this from a remarkably uncertain position of not knowing” (Participant Interview, May 7, 2019). Here Jasleen describes their intentional philosophy of teaching students to go into their clinical placements without preconceived notions of what health challenges and wellness successes will be present in communities. Again, the concept of ‘pathologizing’ comes up as a point of contention for Jasleen. The participant goes on to suggest that “power accrues” through assumptions made about patients based on nurses’ or doctors’ perceptions. Based on one understanding, Jasleen approaches Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies by promoting an “unlearning of colonial practices and mindsets” (Kluttz et al., 2020, p. 49). The literature reveals that unlearning settler-colonialism necessitates taking a political stance in everyday classroom and health care settings to gesture towards Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Akashpreet, a teacher in Nursing, shared, “I guess it's one of the reasons why I talk about nursing as a political act. I'm not asking you to be a politician, I'm asking you to think about the position of leadership that you have as a nurse, the position in society that you have as a nurse to influence others’ behaviours or to influence what's going on in the world around you. Yeah and I think that some of them do get it and all I can do is hope that at some point down the road they go, oh that's what [name] was talking about. They'll start to see ``oh okay so that is what that's all about, that's that piece that is bigger than just me, bigger than just me as a nurse” (Participant Interview, Feb 26, 2019). 125 In the excerpt above, the participant names the practice of nursing as a “political act”. They go on to discuss students’ position and the role nurses play in shaping society. In this way, an analysis suggests that Akashpreet is attempting to move beyond uncritical interpretations of culturalism in the classroom, and to encourage students to take a politicized approach to their practice that considers people’s positionalities in society. Despite all the intricacies and entanglements that arose in the process, overall I witnessed a strong sense of diligence towards critical perspectives and attempts to implement Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. The gravitational pull of culturalism continues to exist, however the capacities of teachers to shift towards critical perspectives are growing. In the following section, I present an analysis of how two additional commonly circulating discourses and policy documents, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and Truth and Reconciliation Commission, contribute to dialogues and practices of Canadian NursMed Education development. 6.2 Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion, and Anti-Racism, and Truth and Reconciliation shape teachers’ Efforts I suggest Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action are two distinct fields of policy and practice that influence pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education, especially during the time fieldwork for this dissertation was conducted. As discussed in the literature review, EDI and TRC are interventions and discourses in Canadian settler-colonial consciousness, whose Calls to Action are taken up from fields 126 ranging from health care to post-secondary education (Henry et al, 2017; Million, 2013; Reading et al, 2016). In this section, I highlight excerpts from the interviews and observations that demonstrate how pluralistic understandings of EDI and TRC Calls to Action shape participants’ efforts to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies into their dialogue and practice. In the year following Third Eye Seeing fieldwork, Anti-Racism has been added in some aspects of EDIA (Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, and Anti-Racism) work. Some aspects of the rise of Anti-Racism language is preempted and reflected in the interviews and classroom observations. 6.2.1 Perspectives on Calls to Action: Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and Anti-Racism The participants’ choice of language suggest an emphasis on the three words ‘Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion’ as verbal placeholders in conversations about pedagogies, program structure, and student demographics related to the principles of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. I notice similar language in the recently released statements from the Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing: “Nurse educators are called to create inclusive, non-racist environments for students…to ensure the delivery of equitable healthcare to all” (2020); and the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada: “The AFMC is committed to…ensure that our environments are diverse, inclusive, culturally safe and foster equity” (2020). In the two policy excerpts, the reader can see the mix of vocabulary used to describe similar social processes in Canadian NursMed Education. Notably, many participants described and taught ‘diversity courses’. The Third Eye Seeing findings and previous research show that many NursMed schools offer what I refer to 127 as ‘diversity courses’ that touch on some aspects of understanding intersecting social relations and histories in Canada (Guerra & Kurtz, 2017). Many schools have expanded these courses to include conversations around Reconciliation, health care for refugees, and other matters of citizenship, border imperialism, and racialization relegated to the seemingly indefinite category of ‘diversity.’ In the interviews and literature, ‘diversity courses’ are becoming increasingly mandatory for all students in Canadian NursMed Education, compared to previous years where they were non-existent or offered as electives (Blackstock, 2017). In the observations, I witnessed the adaptations Canadian NursMed Education has made in the last several years to attend calls for EDI. To illustrate the seemingly ubiquitous use of EDI language, I present a few excerpts from several participants in succession below: Jagdeep: “I think there are a few people who happen to be members of diversity groups, myself, you know, people who are from the LGBTQ community, people who are Indigenous” (Participant Interview, May 7, 2019). Tejbir: “I never thought strategically about doing this. I just knew that I liked working with students who were interested in equity and diversity and social justice” (Participant Interview, Aug 6, 2019). Harpreet: “We have a course called Human Diversity, we cover health inequities and the social determinants of health. So the health of immigrants and refugees are addressed there” (Participant Interview, April 18, 2019). 128 Prabjot: “It’s no longer just about colour, it’s about diversity, it’s about gender and it’s about ethnic, you know, background, it’s about everything. So going back to your question I don’t think we do as good a job because it’s a topic that people seldom wanted to touch” (Participant Interview, Feb 15, 2019). Akashpreet: “I'm generalizing grossly because there is some diversity in the class, like I have 98% white and 2% other. But, you know, I guess – well when we first started to see diversity in nursing classrooms it was the male, female kind of diversity. It was like oh my gosh, we've got men in our classroom, what are we going to do with this, how do we deal with this?” (Participant Interview, Feb 26, 2019). Lavindeep: “I find that there’s still – and this is just because of my background as an immigrant myself, seeing some topics of let’s say colonialism, some topics related to inclusion, diversity – I find that there’s a lot of discussions going on related to the topics. There’s not a lot of movement in terms of actions, right?” (Participant Interview, Feb 21, 2019). Kulwant: “I think again in a multicultural society the issue of diversity not only in terms of your ancestry, your race, your culture, it is something that makes society advance to a greater degree in all areas of human activity, you know, and that is it really goes basically to the fundamental concepts of genetic diversity. 129 And it’s the same thing in the culture. Bringing diversity to teaching, understanding the reality of the world in terms of what happens and how that influences our own world and our own environment, is an important thing. It actually creates better physicians. Physicians that have an ample mind, that are able to recognize the value of different cultures, different races and different traditions are more effective physicians than physicians that will have a more narrow-minded approach to practice” (Participant Interview, Feb 21, 2019). The participants’ language in the excerpts above affirms that Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion are terms that invoke dialogue about settler-colonialism, social justice, and health equity. The excerpts above, especially from Kulwant, also point to the pervasiveness of “raciological thinking”, even among teachers who are attempting to orient themselves towards Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies (Gilroy, 2000, p. 30). It should be noted that this snapshot of participant interviews precedes the calls and renewed attentions to anti-racism movement that occurred in 2020 and continue in the current context. Since the completion of fieldwork there has been a notable discursive shift in Canadian NursMed Education towards framing policy and practice as ‘anti-racism’ (AFMC, 2020; CASN, 2020). 6.2.2 Perspectives on Calls to Action: TRC The Third Eye Seeing findings also feature the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) as a policy and discourse used to inform Canadian NursMed Education with particular attention to the health impact of settler-colonialism on Indigenous Peoples and the land. 130 Moreover, the TRC is one avenue through which teachers understand and attempt to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in practice. The TRC as an entry point into addressing the ongoing health impact of settler-colonialism is also supported at the professional organization level in Nursing and Medicine. For instance, a recently published discussion paper by CASN is based on actions taken “to provide national support for reconciliation by fostering reflection related to decolonization and Indigenization, and by offering direction to schools of nursing in responding to the TRC Calls to Action” (2020, p. 3). The participants suggest that moves towards decolonization are a direct result of institutional shifts made possible through the TRC, which was detailed in Chapter 2: Literature Review and Chapter 5: Findings A. To start with a notable example, Arneet, a teacher in Medicine, recounts a clear example of how one should not to approach Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. The participant shared a story of students who self-identified as Indigenous women organizing a town hall to address Indigenous-specific racism in their department. Arneet disclosed that members of senior leadership intentionally shielded themselves from having to listen, bear witness, and create actionable change based on the students’ perspectives. According to this participant, rather than showing up for the principles of decolonization, the group of administrators decided to schedule a mandatory meeting at the exact time as the town hall such that none of their members were able to attend. The participant went on to say, “So that kind of tells you. Indigenous people are always carrying the load. We develop things. We do literature searches. We become the experts on how the settler state wants to kill us and we define it, we articulate equity and we show it in the 131 attempt that teaching settlers about their state on our lands and how it affects us will make them change. And that's why I eventually [left]... I figured that I could probably do more work outside here embedded within my own community of Indigenous people rather than embedded within the system” (Participant Interview, Mar 11, 2019). The excerpt and narrative above is in congruence with recent literature on settler-colonialism, which points to the notion that systemic change is only adopted by settlers when convenient (Elwood, Andreotti, Stein, 2019). The participant also vividly details how settler-colonial institutions such as Canadian NursMed Education, very often put the onus of implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies on teachers racialized as Indigenous Peoples. A counter-action and refusal by senior administration to engage with Calls to Action detailed in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission process marks a significant moment in the turning point of Arneet’s experience of well-being in their school. The emotional and spiritual costs of teaching through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies will be further detailed in Chapter 7: Findings C. In gesturing towards integrating pedagogies that attend to healing intergenerational trauma and violence, some participants spoke of the ongoing resilience, activism, and deep considerations of land that are continually embodied in Indigenous worldsenses. Evoking reconciliation, Gianleen, an administrator in both NursMed, spoke about an Indigenouscentered curriculum that was in development at their school, 132 “We developed a process whereby the first year was about relationship building, both on and off campus. Keeping with a community-based approach, to be inclusive, to involve diverse groups. We have [a] diversity of Indigenous communities… [NursMed school]'s in the backyard of those communities if you will. That kind of comprehensive strategic planning process was needed to establish trust, further the relationships with our community partners towards the goal of integrating or informing a curriculum that would make sense to students who attend here. As part of the reconciliation process, we've developed a [name] working group. And that is composed of those who have engaged in Indigenous-centric curriculum development. In the health science education environment, the clash of worldviews, with respect to diverse ways of knowing and Western versus Indigenous healing systems, is the focus of trying to achieve a curriculum and integrate understanding about spirit, Indigenous ways of knowing, and healing. So that is what is unique to Indigenous people is that we have a worldview that is grounded in an acknowledgement in a truth that spirit is integrated in everything that we do. And it's – it's a worldview that is grounded in the notion of flux and ongoing evolution and harmony with the world around us. We're not siloed into thinking that 133 our spiritual beliefs are something separate from education or any other sector or silo. It's integrated into everything” (Participant Interview, April 5, 2019). In the excerpts above, the participant shared the process of building meaningful relationships with local Indigenous communities and recognizing the politics of land. The language of decolonization is braided with institutional language like “working groups” and “curriculum development”, which is reminiscent of a ‘two-eyed seeing’ approach (Martin, 2012). At the same time, Gianleen also pointed to a “clash of worldviews” within Canadian NursMed Education that can often create binary divisions between communities. Pivoting to the responsibility that settlers and arrivants have to support the TRC Calls to Action, Kirpal, a teacher in Nursing, described the resistance one must overcome in service of implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, “I feel like I have little authority over talking about Indigenous-settler relations or Indigenous-settler discourse […] and there's a counter argument to that that says enough with tokenizing Indigenous folks, and it's really exhausting for them every single time, to talk about themselves, to be able to educate us. We need to take responsibility for our own education and our own ignorance and historical colonization and the consequences, and we need to just learn about it and start to teach about it, and shift generations ourselves instead of exhaustingly drawing on Indigenous folks and Indigenous resources to be able to educate us, because it's been 500 years. Like, hello” (Participant Interview, July 12, 2019). 134 The participant started off by sharing how they feel that they have very little command to teach what they described as Indigenous-settler relations. However, they also recognize how tiring it can be for teachers racialized as Indigenous Peoples are always tasked with the work of decolonizing Canadian NursMed Education. Kirpal ruminates on the idea that ‘settlers’ must take responsibility for un-learning colonial ways of being and learning, and forming meaningful relationships with Indigenous communities. On a similar note, I observed a class in nursing with a focus on decolonization. Two teachers co-taught the course. The fieldnotes reveal the types of pedagogical tools the teaching team used to encourage teachers and students to reflect on their roles in reconciliation, “After the guest speaker, we took a break and moved from a large lecture hall to a smaller classroom with about 20 students. The teacher Manjit begins with reflecting on the local context of their school in relation to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), which was adopted by the Canadian federal government one year after the release of the TRC Calls to Action. Students are asked to read and review one particular ‘right’ from UNDRIP and come up with an action they would take as nurses to uphold the right. Manjit goes on to direct students to read two articles on ‘decolonization’ during class time, and highlights the key points raised. Namely, that settlers must dismantle implicit biases and acknowledge that the Canadian health care system was established 135 on the basis of racism. Moreover, biomedicine is not the only way to practice health care, and in order to promote reconciliation nurses can unlearn assumptions about biomedical intellectual superiority” (Participant observation, June 4, 2019). In the description of observations above, I highlight the ways in which teachers may support practices of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies by taking a critical pedagogical approach. Rather than employing the language of ‘Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion’, Manjit uses powerful words to invoke dialogue such as ‘human rights’, ‘racism’, and ‘settlers’. Here, the everyday use of critical philosophies of teaching such as Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies draw attention to and practice the unlearning, scarring, and counter-storytelling necessary for health equity and social justice (Ahenakew, 2019; DiAngelo, 2011; Sólorzano & Yosso, 2002). Overall, I suggest that Third Eye Seeing participants describe and practice various ways they align their practice of applying Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies within the context of national Calls to Action. According to an analysis of interviews and classroom observations, the languages of EDI and TRC are commonplace within Canadian NursMed Education. I observe that the terms are applied as pedagogical tools to contribute to dialogue and efforts to redress deepening, intersecting health and social inequities. 6.3 Attempts to Integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Practice In the previous two sections of this chapter I shared excerpts from the participants’ stories and observations to illustrate the complexities of evolving pedagogies in Nursing and 136 Medicine. Namely, the gravitational pull of culturalism is an ongoing challenge to critically examining health equity, social justice, and settler-colonialism in these fields of education. At the same time, the discourses of EDI and TRC Calls to Action influence pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. In the final section of this chapter, I share examples of strategies that participants employed with the intention of integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in practice. An analysis shows that participants' attempts included a) making linguistic and philosophical connections between intersecting health and social inequities; and b) expressing empathy and exploration of multiple worldsenses across social differences. To begin, Gurneet, an educator in Nursing, shared a specific example of how they pedagogically ‘wake-up’ students to the political, economic, and social context of people in Canada, “I would try to have case studies that were more around multicultural populations or populations from diverse cultural backgrounds and try to get them to see and understand. So I can give you an example of one case. I had this case study where I have it as a newcomer mom, she has a language barrier. And so she’s had a baby and you’re the community health nurse and you go to visit and realize she’s isolated. You want students to then look at the prevention of postpartum depression. 137 So how are you going to help create some broader social networks for her? And it’s been so fascinating, all this talk about is, ‘Oh, we’ll get her to come to the [parent/infant] group.’ Well, if you go to a [parent/infant] group, it’s all done in English. It’s a very Western kind of occasion. Not that they’re all—but a lot of [parent/infant] groups are educated families who understand English and it’s very easy to get there, and so she’s not going to be feeling comfortable. She’s not going to be able to access that. And in my case, I have another child. So you’re talking about her having to get on a bus, in the winter months, with a newborn baby and a child and go and attend this [parent/infant] group which might be across the town for her. Like how realistic is that and can you see her really accessing that. And there’s nobody that looks like her and the facilitator is English-speaking—how does that work? So really trying to get them to go into that again thinking outside the box and saying, ‘Okay, put yourself in that situation’” (Participant Interview, Aug 8, 2019). Gurneet’s case study asks students to think about the accessibility of preventative therapy – in this case a parent/infant group – in relation to considerations of ability (using the bus), language (beyond English), sex (childbirth), gender (mothering) and citizenship (a newcomer). In this way, the participant aims to raise nursing students’ consciousness and instructs them to consider patients’ intersectional identities when creating health care plans. 138 Gurneet’s strategy connects to the perspective that Decolonial, Intersection Pedagogies can support students to understand, “greater levels of complexity because they are iterative and interactional, always examining the connections among seemingly distinctive categories of analysis” (Hill Collins, 2019, p. 47). In the excerpt above, the participant demonstrates how they are able to encourage students to reflect on the multiple contexts of patients. Manjit, a teacher in Nursing, details their approach to navigating conversations related to migration. They described how the attempt to convey the complexities of human migration and the impact on health in classrooms, “In the context of what’s happened in the history of the world, of settler-colonialism, of imperialism, of capitalism, neoliberalism. It’s made it very difficult to ... and perhaps limiting to think of categories of migration, in terms of forced or involuntary; because all of these factors shape what folks’ lived experiences are and all of the reasons they choose to migrate. So somebody, you know, choosing to migrate, you know, with a stronger sense of urgency than others. It might be more generative to think of all transnational migrations as being interrelated. And not to undermine folks who really are ... you know, where that sense of urgency is quite strong. It’s a different constellation of conditions that are happening around that. So a lot of my work is around migration and health” (Participant Interview, April 9, 2019). 139 In the interview excerpt, Manjit is describing migration beyond the binary ideas of forced migration and voluntary migration. They point towards pedagogically ‘gesturing towards’ understanding global movements of people across a spectrum or “constellation of conditions”. The participant also names several processes of modernity such as “settlercolonialism, imperialism, capitalism, and neoliberalism” as factors that may influence people’s experience of health and wellbeing. Based on an analysis, both Gurneet and Manjit describe what they hope to achieve through engaging ‘wokeness18’ in their classrooms as a strategy to evoke a conscious use of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. In terms of the impact of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies on learners, Prabjot, a participant in Nursing, shared an instance of receiving student feedback, “So the student says, ‘I went home and I finally had the courage to talk to my family about who we are and just the skeletons out of the closet just came and came and came’, and she says, ‘I had no idea’. She says, ‘I knew we had a history but my parents did not talk about it. Today at class or yesterday at class or last week at class, you raised my consciousness and gave me 18 The term ‘woke’ is a term from African-American vernacular used to refer to people who are “aware of and actively attentive to important facts and issues (especially issues of racial and social justice)” (MerriamWebster, 2020). In the words of US Congresswoman Barbara Lee, “we will only succeed if we reject the growing pressure to retreat into cynicism and hopelessness. … We have a moral obligation to stay woke, take a stand and be active; challenging injustices and racism in our communities and fighting hatred and discrimination wherever it rises” (Merriam-Webster, 2020). The term ‘woke’ is a term from African-American vernacular used to refer to people who are “aware of and actively attentive to important facts and issues (especially issues of racial and social justice)” (Merriam-Webster, 2020). In the words of US Congresswoman Barbara Lee, “we will only succeed if we reject the growing pressure to retreat into cynicism and hopelessness. … We have a moral obligation to stay woke, take a stand and be active; challenging injustices and racism in our communities and fighting hatred and discrimination wherever it rises” (Merriam-Webster, 2020). 140 clarity and I was clear enough to ask the questions’, and I said, ‘Thank you, thank you for letting me know’. I said, ‘This is what the purpose of this course is so you’re now on a different journey’” (Participant Interview, Feb 15, 2019). Here Prabjot paraphrases the experience of instilling “raised consciousness” through their pedagogy. The participant recounts an example of how Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can allow students to reflect on their own positionality and context. The concept of ‘reflexivity’ can be applied here to unpack the student’s response described by Prabjot above. In Chapter 4: Methodology and Research Design, I discussed the importance of paying attention to how my own epistemology and social location influences the research encounter and analysis. Similarly, several of the participants described how reflexivity can be invoked as a pedagogy to support students to, “understand the conceptual limits of their own thinking [and] hold complex understandings constructed through their own lived experiences, through family, work, and/or social groups” (McDowall, 2020, p. 7). According to one interpretation, Prabjot’s strategic use of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies allowed one student to engage reflexivity in their own learning journey in the excerpt above. When it comes to consciousness raising, Kulwant, an educator in Medicine, suggests that the concept of ‘two-eyed seeing’ (Martin, 2012) is one important theory and practice from which to approach teaching in medical education. They described, “One of the concepts that would be very interesting to be incorporated is the concept of two-eyed seeing. We see medicine only in one eye, the Western eye, and we feel 141 that this is where the knowledge of medicine and the science of medicine are the main focus of our schools. We rarely open the [Indigenous] eye which is something that has been advocated [for] by some of the Elders in some of the Indigenous nations. To be able to open the [Indigenous] eye and see the patient, seeing the knowledge in medicine with two eyes – which again will be maybe not even complementary, maybe synergistic. Maybe seeing with two eyes will be, you know, not one plus one [equals] two but it will be maybe 1,000” (Participant Interview, Feb 21, 2019). Kulwant’s comments reveal that space for Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies is possible if Canadian NursMed Education can attend to the recommendations of two-eyed seeing as described in Chapter 3: Theoretical Perspectives. According to one interpretation, Kulwant shared the belief that drawing on the wisdom, ideas, and practical suggestions from the communities most affected by settler-colonialism can have a “synergistic” impact on health and wellness for all. Arneet, a teacher in Medicine, responded to a question about implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in classrooms. They shared, “You can embed things within where people actually have to start using words like racism, oppression, and look at homophobia, Islamophobia and all of these kinds of things, as well as gender violence and other forms of misogyny and do it in an experiential way” (Participant Interview, Mar 11, 2019). 142 Here the participant refers to inserting lessons and practices where students are encouraged to physically and materially practice saying words like “racism”, “oppression” and “Islamophobia”, and identify connections between them based on their own positionality and intersecting identities. Based on the excerpt above, I understand that Arneet engages in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies by facilitating conversations among students using language that explicitly names forms of discriminations such as ‘Islamophobia’ that lead to health and social inequities. In another case, Manmeet, a participant in Nursing, suggested creating spaces where students have the time, space, and energy to unpack their own privileges: “I take the onus off the individual. I try to make it very clear that a racist is not something you are, it’s something that you do and it’s a choice. You’re not responsible for the fact you’re born with whatever skin, or that you were born into a wealthy highly privileged family or whatever your situation is. You’re not responsible for that. You’re responsible for your behaviour. You’re responsible for what you do with your privileges and you have choices about what you do with your privileges. The more privilege you have the more choices you have. So, you know, I try to give people context because I find that the majority of students are not, they’re not committed to race-based privilege, they’re not. They want to practice in a socially just, anti-racist way [but] they just don’t know how to get out of 143 their own privilege, and they don’t know how to be allies…they don’t know how to get around their defensiveness” (Participant Interview, April 4, 2019). According to the excerpt above, Manmeet’s approach was not to shame people, instead to emphasize that with more privilege comes more choice. Manmeet uses the concepts of ‘privilege’ and ‘allyship’ as indicators of how Nursing students understand their own positionality in health care. This language stems from a growing field of scholarship in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. In particular, I am drawn to making connections between Manmeet’s story above and the conceptualization of ‘pedagogies of discomfort’ (Boudreau Morris, 2017; Zembylas & Papamichael, 2017). According to an interpretation of the data, Manmeet is strategically using Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies to de-center student’s experiences of “guilt, anxiety, certainty, and challenges to identity” in order to unsettle how they co-create relationships of allyship and solidarity building (Boudreau Morris, 2017, p. 469). In summary, the interview excerpts above provide glimpses of some strategies used by participants to attempt to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Using the power of hindsight, I notice that the teachers and administrators provided examples of navigating institutional features and the gravitational pull of ‘culturalism’ to bring forth critical perspectives such as Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. According to an understanding, the participants’ words and choices of expression signify their commitments to raising consciousness. Moreover, they encourage students to go beyond surface-level understandings of colonialism and related modern processes, with the intention of transforming future nurses’ and doctors’ conceptions of practicing health care. 144 6.4 Summary To conclude, in this chapter I shared three important considerations that add to the complexity of integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. First, culturalism continues to maintain a stronghold as a primary lens through which deepening, intersecting health and social inequities are explained. Second, understandings of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion and Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action influence participants’ philosophies of teaching, especially in relation to settler-colonial, health equity, and social justice. Finally, there are multiple ways in which the educators and administrators attempt to incorporate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies into their classrooms. In Chapter 7: Findings C, the final findings chapter, I present stories and observations that illustrate some of the health impacts on participants of teaching through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. 145 Chapter 7: “I Don’t Feel Safe”: The Emotional and Spiritual Costs of Implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies Perhaps the most common and potentially concerning findings of the Third Eye Seeing project are the emotional and spiritual19 costs of engaging Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. I notice that a focus on teaching settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice can influence participants’ mental, emotional, spiritual, and potentially even physical health. Going beyond the individual, the findings presented in this chapter also unveil how systemic patterns of settler-colonialism are reproduced to perpetuate intersecting health and social inequities. Canadian NursMed Education is positioned to train the next generation of nurses and doctors who are learning skills to provide health care. Yet, the interviews and classroom observations suggest that the institutions themselves are also sites of pain, suffering, and tests of resilience for participants. In Chapter 7, I share stories and data that illustrate four themes: 1) the limitations of distracting technologies on learning and unlearning 2) resistance to and support for Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies from participants’ colleagues; 3) student responses to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies and; 4) adaptations participants have made to promote their wellbeing while using Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. 19 As shared in Chapter 2: Literature, in this dissertation I use a definition of health from the First Nations Health Authority, which states, “the importance of Mental, Emotional, Spiritual and Physical facets of a healthy, well, and balanced life. It is critically important that there is balance between these aspects of wellness and that they are all nurtured together to create a holistic level of well-being in which all four areas are strong and healthy.” (First Nations Health Authority, 2021). 146 7.1 The Limitations of Distracting Technologies In the first section of this Chapter, I wish to address a new consideration for the emotional and spiritual costs of integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education: the rapid inclusion of digital technologies in pedagogy. The Third Eye Seeing course observations suggest that the significant presence of digital technologies is experienced in the classroom in nuanced ways. It should be noted that the fieldwork for this dissertation was completed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the massive movements towards online education. Further research will likely be required to induce how all members of universities experience learning and unlearning in the current paradigm of online education. Namely, I suggest that the emergence of digital technologies in classrooms can serve as a distraction to students and hinder their capacity to critically examine settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice, and may harm teachers’ and students’ wellbeing. This may at first glance stand in contrast to the current ubiquitous use of devices like laptops and smartphones, and the abundance of online programs considered benchmarks of innovative education in the modern world (Ghimire, 2019; Valle et al., 2017). I recognize that in 2021, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, most programs are operating online. However, while research shows some benefits to the use of technology in classrooms, the Third Eye Seeing observational data indicates that the vast majority of computer, tablet, and smartphone use by students seemed to be distracting. This is a troubling finding given that over 90 percent of the students in classrooms I observed were situated with laptop screens (and sometimes also tablets and smartphones) in front of them. While attempting to pay attention to teachers’ presentations (usually in a 147 slideshow format), I found myself unavoidably glancing at students’ screens. I found that some students took notes, however, the majority used their devices for connection outside of the particular classroom I was observing. Fieldnotes from an observation in a medical school classroom illustrates my visceral reaction towards the use of digital devices, “I still can’t get over the looming presence of phones and laptops in the class. After my first classroom observation, I notice that the students are switching between the teacher’s presentation (which is already on the big screen) and so many other applications and assignments. Rather than providing a way to capture their notes on the class topic, and teachers’ instruction, the tech seems to be detracting student’s attention by promoting doubleand triple-screening. The glowing displays feel like spiritual vampires leeching onto the students’ mindset, body, and focus. I can’t believe I’m thinking this but I’m kind of missing the days of overhead projectors, chalkboards, and mechanical pencils” (Participant observation, Sept 19, 2019). Another excerpt from the fieldnotes during a Nursing school classroom visit further illustrates this claim, 148 “I’m so grateful that Manjit, a teacher in Nursing, is engaging with the article ‘decolonization is not a metaphor’. The authors are so crisp in their analysis of settler complicity in ongoing colonialism. Manjit reminds the students of how nurses are implicated as well. I wonder if they are even listening? At this point, I look around to see some students on message groups presumably chatting with friends. Some are working on assignments for other classes. Others are scrolling through social media feeds. I take one more peek, and see one student frantically clicking through various recipe websites. Is this what Eve Tuck and Wayne Yang had in mind when they wrote about reconciling our guilt? Are we all just masking our bodies’ reactions to settler guilt through digitally-induced serotonin hits?” (Participant observation, June 4, 2019). The excerpts above are just two examples of teachers in Nursing and Medicine attempting to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, only to be met with subconscious (and maybe even conscious) resistance in the form of distracting technologies. The use of laptops, smartphones, and tablets are one seemingly inescapable yet increasingly invisible example of what some scholars call ‘modernity’s shine’ that came up in the fieldwork (Andreotti, 2015). As detailed in Chapter 2: Literature Review, the term ‘modernity’ encompasses the nexus of colonialism, heteropatriarchy, neoliberal capitalism, and environmental extraction. As such, 149 even if Third Eye Seeing participants aimed to expose students to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies and critiques of coloniality, their teachings may not be receivable due to learner’s entanglements and addictions to their digital devices. In this case, “when exposed to critiques that implicate modernity’s shine in the creation of its shadow, those enchanted with the shine tend to resist and deny their complicity in harm.” (Andreotti et al., 2015, p. 24). By their very nature, laptops, phones, and tablets (literally) symbolize the shiny side of modernity, and members of Canadian NursMed Education, might be using them to escape critical reflections on settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice. The findings from the fieldwork presented above demonstrate how distracting technologies can act as a significant challenge to the health of educators (and perhaps students as well). I suggest teachers and administrators may feel a sense of disconnection from their students due to the limitations posed by the presence of laptops, tablets, and smartphones. Moreover, the participants may find that students are unable to grasp key concepts due to the trends of multi-tasking, double- and triple-screening, and mental absenteeism from the classroom. In this way, I posit that digital technologies may divert attention away from Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education in some cases. 7.2 Resistance and Support from Colleagues Drawing on the principles of ‘critical’ perspectives, the social environment in which Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies are applied can influence their pedagogical uptake and reception in Canadian NursMed Education. Notably, an analysis of the findings shows 150 participants received resistant and ambivalent responses from colleagues while teaching through philosophies of decolonization and intersectionality. To note some of the points of resistance, a participant in Nursing, described a situation where their colleagues racialized as Indigenous Peoples experienced ‘burnout’ from the demands of engaging with Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in the university. ‘Burnout’ can be defined as “a multifaceted condition of overwhelming exhaustion, interpersonal detachment, or cynicism toward one’s job, and a sense of reduced professional efficacy, driven by long-term workplace stress” (Hewitt et al., 2020, p. 2). As described in Chapter 4: Methodology, the pace of work in academia has significantly increased in recent years, which can also influence experiences of burnout (Aquino et al., 2018; Sabagh et al., 2018). Harpreet described some of their sentiments on burnout in their interview, “We’ve had a lot of our Indigenous scholars exiting from the university with claims of being really frustrated, that they are so tired of having to justify everything in a colonial system. For example, there was a dean that I worked under recently who asked me if racism still occurs today. It’s so frustrating that they’ve moved elsewhere…” (Participant Interview, April 18, 2019). 151 The participant points to the exasperation felt by their Indigenous colleagues. They go on to describe how their colleagues have eventually run out of resources, energetic capacity, and empathy for attempting to change a settler-colonial system. Harpreet goes on to say, “I think the Elder actually was really hurt by something, you know, and it had to do with pay or hours or, you know, something really significant to the Elder, so that person left. And so we’ve been without an Elder for, I think, over 12 months; and, you know, I think the word is out that, you know, we’re kind of a little bit difficult to work with” (Participant Interview, April 18, 2019). The participant described how an Indigenous Elder felt disrespected by members of the school, especially in relation to the financial worth of their labour, and went on to share how the Elder decided to quit their post. According to one reading of the excerpt, Harpreet’s explanations above are reminiscent of claims made by Henry et al. (2017) in a recently published longitudinal study of racialization and Indigeneity in Canadian academia. The authors explain that faculty who self-identified as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour, “have developed various coping strategies to confront a lack of departmental support and aggressive behaviours designed to push them out or keep them down including institutional departure” (Henry et al., 2017, p. 29). In the excerpt above, the participant uses the language of ‘exiting from the university’ to describe how their colleagues were pushed towards institutional departure. 152 Another example illustrates how participants and their colleagues permanently left situations that felt unsafe for them. Arneet, an educator in Medicine, shared their analysis of why teachers who self-identify as Indigenous Peoples may leave their positions in universities, “Because when you open their eyes, like in this conscientization process, when you realize on a deep level that you are complicit, it's a hell of a thing to take on and then to teach that. Even the people who one might identify as the most solid allies, still fall back and they have to be supported to look at what they're doing or saying. And that sounds like a bit of a hopeless statement, but it's not a hopeless statement. All it is, is a statement that the structures, the institutions in [the] broadest sense propagate that behaviour and they want you to do that behaviour and so when you fight it, you're fighting something that's far greater than you. Unless you have some incredible community of change that supports you almost on a daily basis to be able to finally see Indigenous Peoples with all the rights associated with being human in Canada, and that is one of the biggest challenges” (Participant Interview, Mar 11, 2019). Here Arneet described the challenges of braiding Indigenous worldsenses into Canadian NursMed Education. The participants used terms such as ‘allies’, ‘fighting something...greater than you’, and ‘fall back’ to represent the challenges of working with colleagues towards the integration of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. These terms 153 invoke a sense of battle and violence. They are also in alignment with scholars who detail the necessary steps to counteract hundreds of years long ‘epistemicides’ or killing off of knowledge and ways of being through the colonization of thought, education, and the university (de Sousa Santos, 2015, p. 2; Grosfoguel, 2013, p. 74). Notably, Arneet suggested that having a ‘community of change...on a daily basis’ is what may be needed as an adaptation to support the revitalization of worldsenses and overall efforts of Indigenous faculty members. At the same time, an analysis of the participant’s narrative above suggests that the institutions of Canadian NursMed Education (and universities more broadly) is itself a product of colonialism. As such, the individual experiences of Third Eye Seeing participants are couched within structures of knowledge and education built through “regimes of epistemic racism” (Grosfoguel, 2013, p. 84). In another case, Jagdeep, a teacher in Nursing, described a situation where they were similarly challenged by the lack of support they received from colleagues. The participant shared a story from a recent faculty meeting: “I wish I hadn’t been as explosive, but we were talking about protecting students of colour. Students of colour…have formed these groups now. This is a new thing. They all have these groups because they don’t feel safe and I was like okay, well I don’t feel safe either. Like it’s not just about the students. You’ve got one faculty [racialized as a person of colour]...Does anybody care about the fact that I don’t feel safe? Like I may not be a 154 student, but I still have emotions and I don’t consider the students any more important than me. You know, my wellbeing and my rights on campus are just as important as the students. But it’s like, well, [name]’s faculty so we don’t have to care about [them]. So, I had to say it in a faculty meeting last year and I said you also have to protect faculty who are here and who are being dumped on by the students” (Participant Interview, May 7, 2019). Jagdeep starts their story by expressing guilt about their reaction in a meeting. I notice that they use the phrase ‘I wish I hadn’t been so explosive’, which I understand to symbolize a “negative, affective response to their actions” (Bynum & Goodie, 2014, p. 1046). Jagdeep then went on to explain how students racialized as people of colour are forming groups within their programs with the intention of creating a ‘safe’ place to learn. The participant suggests that, in addition to considering the safety of students, universities must consider the health of faculty racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour as well. From one view, the notion of feeling safe goes back to the concept of “cultural safety” presented in Chapter 2: Literature Review. I believe that Jagdeep is referring not only to physical safety, but also their mental, emotional, and spiritual safety and wellbeing. Jagdeep is presenting the idea that they have not always received protection from fellow teachers or administrators, which may have made them vulnerable to ‘being dumped on’ by the students in their classes. 155 The excerpt above highlights the prevalence of ongoing systemic racism and settlercolonialism which act to deny or hide the emotional and spiritual costs to faculty racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour (Ahmed, 2012; Henry et al, 2017; Mohamed & Beagan, 2019). Gurneet, an educator in Nursing, shares similar sentiments about their own experience as one of the only teachers racialized as a person of colour in their faculty. In contrast to Jagdeep, they describe not feeling as open to bring the issues up with their colleagues, “When you look at other places [such as colleges], their faculty is not so homogenous, they have a variety of people on the faculty of the School of Nursing. I have several colleagues who are teaching there. And so, you have a very mixed faculty that is teaching, so why is it there and why not here? Is it because the university is this ivory tower place? So, is it okay to hire people from different cultural backgrounds at the college-level? That’s what they used to be at one time, right? So, it was okay to hire them at the college-level and not okay to hire them here at the university-level. It’s interesting when you begin to try and unpack, and try to understand, what has gone on before and why are we still here with this sort of a narrow focus of [the] population that teaches in terms of faculty? [However]… I’m not sure how safe I feel 156 to bring those kinds of conversations very strongly” (Participant Interview, Aug 8, 2019). In the excerpt above, I infer that Gurneet is hesitant to bring forth their perspectives on addressing inequities in hiring and pedagogy at their school. I found that some of the participants in Third Eye Seeing described a reluctance in speaking out loud about aspects of settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice such as racialized inequities in faculty meetings or other places that they designate as unsafe. When asked about the implications of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies for their school, Akashpreet, a participant in Nursing, reported on a faculty meeting related to teaching Indigenous knowledges and modalities of healing, “The discussion that we had, it was very interesting. A lot of it is about privileged white women feeling that they're not sure whether we have the right to teach this kind of topic or this topic because how dare we?... It's interesting because yeah, do I have the right to teach this stuff and do I have the knowledge to teach this stuff?...Our [Indigenous program] director said absolutely you have the right to teach it and absolutely you can gain the knowledge for sure. This knowledge isn't held by any one person, that it's a collective… And it's not that it has to be delivered by any one person or a person with a certain background” (Participant Interview, Feb 26, 2019). 157 One reading of the excerpt above, points to the need to alleviate guilt that teachers identified settlers and arrivants might feel when tasked to teach about settler-colonialism and Indigenous worldsenses. I believe the story above represents what some scholars of decolonization refer to as “moves to innocence” which problematically work to absolve teachers of their complicity in ongoing settler-colonialism (Tuck & Yang, 2012, p. 9; Macoun, 2016, p. 86). An analysis suggests that this may allow for a continued affective investment in settler-colonial innocence. The excerpt above can be interpreted as an example of one way in which faculty members who self-identify as Indigenous Peoples are tasked with ‘including’ Indigenous knowledges in academia “in ways that do not make their nonIndigenous colleagues uncomfortable” (Stein, 2020, p. 162). As Arneet’s interview excerpts emphasized at the beginning of the chapter, this has the potential to put “less emphasis on changing the structures that have made universities hostile places for Indigeneity to begin with” (Gaudry and Lorenz, 2018, p. 220). In the observations, I witnessed two classes that were new additions to Nursing programs. In our discussions, prior to my visit, the teachers stated that the courses emerged out of the TRC Calls to Action (TRC, 2015). The fieldnotes below expand on the analysis above, to share cases of two teaching teams I observed as existing in the tensions of innocence and acknowledging complicity, “I’m so thrilled to see Sukhi and Anandkaur, and Manjit and Karmveer working together. Though the two teaching teams exist in different institutions, likely don’t know each other, and have developed their courses independently, I see some parallel themes and commonalities. 158 Both teams include faculty members who identified as Indigenous Peoples and nonIndigenous Peoples (to use this common binary). Moreover, they all are attempting to approach their pedagogy through the lenses of decolonization and intersectionality. In both classes, I did notice a hesitation to make connections between ongoing global migration, the wider context of colonialism, and the importance of rematriating Indigenous land and life on Turtle Island. I also observed varying levels of familiarity in making connections out loud in the classroom to the land on which their schools are based and their own social locations” (Participant observation, Jun 4, 2019; Participant observation, Sept 30, 2019). I share the fieldnotes excerpt above to suggest that working in teaching teams with colleagues may support the uptake of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. At the same time, I observed feelings of doubt around uncomfortable conversations that would allow participants, especially those racialized as white and/or people of colour, to acknowledge their own complicity in settler-colonialism. This aligns with what Tuck and Yang (2012) assert as “strategies or positionings that attempt to relieve the settler of feelings of guilt of responsibility without giving up land or power or privilege, without having to change much at all” (p. 10). I suggest that some participants’ apprehension towards naming their own individual ancestry and links to land (as opposed to a blanket land 159 acknowledgement) could be read as a ‘move to innocence’. This can take place whether a teacher is working by themselves or as part of a teaching team. It could be suggested that without significant institutional change and official mandates, moves to innocence can continue to add to the emotional and spiritual costs of gesturing towards decolonization and intersectionality. In this way, they present a challenge and complexity to integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. Almost all participants agreed that their departments lacked a clear mandate that required all members to take seriously the actualization of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. One exception was Kaladhar, a participant in Medicine, who shared, “I was once told when I was starting at [NursMed school] that if you ever…encounter dissension or, you know, encounter [any] kind of conflict, always come back to the mission that we’re all here for this and I think it stands true. I think everyone who works here very much believes in the mission and believes in what we’re doing at [NursMed school]. So I think it really is kind of the core of what everyone is about here which is, I think, unique” (Participant Interview, Mar 6, 2019). Kaladhar’s narrative demonstrates the real potential when the discursive elements of social justice – a strong mission, value, and strategic intentions – are center points for the decisionmaking process in Canadian NursMed Education. Kaladhar’s school has a strong, politicized set of guiding documents that foster epistemological pluralism and solidarity among teachers, senior leadership, students, staff, and community. The excerpt above suggests that having a 160 mission statement and set of guiding policies centering decolonization and intersectionality may alleviate some of the emotional and spiritual cost on teachers. Taking it one step further, I suggest that institutional recognition of land theft, epistemic erasure, and concrete actions towards rematriation of land are necessary for the integration of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies (Gaudry & Lorenz, 2018; de Sousa Santos, 2015; Henry et al., 2017). As the participant Kaladhar details above, these principles can be constructed as the “core of what everyone is about ''. In light of recent waves of social justice movements, the agendas of participants’ departments may be advancing in this direction as I write this dissertation. 7.3 “It’s a difficult place for safe conversations”: Student Responses to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies Third Eye Seeing participants recounted stories of feedback, struggle, and pushback received from students, which in turn may have affected teachers’ health and wellbeing. This was especially notable when the teacher was racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or a person of colour. For instance, to share a particularly stark example of students’ reactions to teachers who implement Decolonial Intersectional Pedagogies, Jagdeep, an educator in Nursing, described, “In terms of the students, well, that’s a whole other kettle of fish. The students have been extremely hostile to me and to my course since I arrived at the School of Nursing… 161 I was the only [person racialized as Indigenous and/or person of colour] and I’m teaching courses on diversity and in a school of nursing [where] 80 percent of our students are [racialized as] White…and [have] never been taught by a [racialized as Indigenous and/or person of colour] professor… One student…asked me why I was teaching a sociology course…in front of 200 students and [the student was] actually screaming. And then when I walked back to my office [the student] walked with me. [They were] crying. I should have been crying, but [the student was] crying. They said, “I’m so sorry, Professor [name], and [they’re] crying because of the comment that [they] made in my class that was hostile towards me. So [the student] became the victim” (Participant Interview, May 7, 2019). An interpretation of Jagdeep’s memory points to experiences of racism and hostility that the participant faced, especially from students racialized as white, when attempting to bring critical perspectives to their classroom. This example is illustrative of what DiAngelo (2018) describes as ‘white fragility’, the perception of “any attempt to connect us to the system of racism as an unsettling and unfair moral offence, that often triggers a range of defensive responses” (p. 2). Jagdeep went on to share, 162 “So, they actually – they sent a collaborative email to my director probably trying to get rid of me, I don’t know, complaining about me. When my director received that email [my director] actually supported me outright. [My director] sent an email to my whole course, that whole class and [it] said what [name] is doing is extremely significant and I would like the bullying to stop” (Participant Interview, May 7, 2019). This account demonstrates how the process of unsettling settler-colonial dynamics and systems can take a significant psychological toll on faculty, especially those racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour. Jagdeep’s story is in line with recent literature on racialization and settler-colonialism in Canadian academia, which finds “anti-racism models of knowledge are often met with resistance and hostility from students [racialized as white]” (Henry et al., 2017, p. 129). In this way, the negative reactions from students signify an ongoing structural issue that repeatedly infringe on teachers’ capacities to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional pedagogies. In another case, Manmeet, a teacher in Nursing, conveys their role during a similar experience in their department: “The person who was assigned to [the diversity course] was one of the very few racialized persons of colour in the entire school. And so, [they] received the brunt of unfettered racism by students so it was all not good. 163 And you know, because I’m… not obviously or immediately visible as [Indigenous and/or person of colour] to people, when I took over teaching it, it changed the dynamic” (Participant Interview, April 4, 2019). The participant’s narrative holds the idea that students behave and receive learning differently according to the skin colour and perceived positionality of the teacher. This finding is reminiscent of recent literature detailing backlash against teachers racialized as people of colour who also teach through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies (Hartland & Larkai, 2020; Henry et al., 2017). The literature also suggests that student patterns of resistance and/or different interests can go on to influence teachers’ feelings of self-worth and wellbeing in Canadian NursMed Education (Henry et al., 2017, p. 305). Providing another perspective, Prabjot, a participant in Nursing, described their own experience of teaching a course with attention to settler-colonialism, social justice and health equity, “We were accused of reverse discrimination [laughs] that we had an agenda in running this course. It was quite eye-opening and enlightening that we never thought about it that way, that by introducing particular topics we would be vulnerable as persons of colour teaching the topic. So we [the teachers] often reflected on it and talked about how we would share information and how we would deliver the content…It’s a difficult place for safe conversations. I think if classes were smaller and we had seminar groups and the 164 groups were a lot more mixed I think we would have a more robust conversation around that particularly when we’re living in such a diverse community” (Participant Interview, Feb 15, 2019). Here Prabjot speaks to how the positionalities and number of students in classrooms can make a significant impact on how teaching from Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies is received. The large cohorts of learners sitting in massive lecture halls are suggested to hinder the capacity to have ‘safe conversations’. This notion is supported by recent studies on class size and student engagement (Fukuzawa & Boyd, 2016; Rissanen, 2018). From one worldsense, the participant’s story may explain why critical pedagogies may not be integrated by students even if teachers’ put forth concerted efforts to advance courses through decolonization and intersectionality. Moreover, the excerpt above also demonstrates how teachers may face challenges to their emotional and spiritual health based on student responses (or lack thereof) in large lecture halls. As such, the growing size of classrooms (whether in person or online), which can be linked to the corporatization of the university (Brownlee, 2015), represents an additional consideration for pedagogy and the ongoing development of Canadian NursMed Education. Based on the analysis conducted for this dissertation, the gap in integration of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can also go on to influence how graduates of Canadian NursMed Education approach their clinical practice. Moreover, it can influence the ways in which this can be interpreted by their teachers as reflecting students’ capacities for learning and unlearning. To provide an example, Harpreet, an educator and administrator in Nursing, recounted an instance of meeting a recent graduate in a hospital setting. The participant 165 shared that the new nurse expressed their satisfaction at being placed on the oncology ward rather than on the dialysis ward. The recent graduate went on to discuss their (mistaken and problematic) assumptions that patients requiring dialysis have a tendency towards alcoholism, and are often racialized as Indigenous Peoples. In our interview, Harpreet recognized the extent to which this graduate was influenced by one of the most pernicious stereotypes operating in healthcare regarding Indigenous Peoples whose health issues are assumed to be linked to alcohol use (BC Ministry of Health, 2020; Browne, 2017), The graduate shared their relief towards not having to working with such patients. Harpreet lamented, “I was so sad. I thought, you know, you’ve really only been socialized into this practice for ... to me it looked like under five years and already those comments are coming out, and it was just like, oh my gosh, that’s so sad to me” (Participant Interview, April 18, 2019). They used the language of ‘sadness’ to describe their reaction to nursing graduates being coached into assumptions of racialization and stereotyping when entering into practice. In the excerpt above, Harpreet shares their disappointment in hearing how painfully common it is for students and new graduates to reproduce settler-colonialism in clinical settings. This finding is in line with recent events and reports on Indigenous-specific racism as a systemic issue in the Canadian health care system (BC Ministry of Health, 2020). Namely, it provides further evidence for the reality of “extensive profiling of Indigenous patients based on stereotypes about addictions'' (BC Ministry of Health, 2020, p. 7). In the story above, the 166 student is engaging in the, “cumulative and historical measurements that have the effect of pathologizing the life-words of entire communities” (Ahenakew, 2011, p. 22). The excerpt portrays how depleting it may be for teachers to witness students’ moves towards ‘pathologization’ and the perpetuation of health and social inequities. In this way, students’ dismissal of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies after graduating can influence the emotional and spiritual health of teachers. In a final example, Simranpal, an administrator in Nursing, recounts some comments they received from students about their tensions with faculty members in the last year: “It’s been helpful. Hard, because you hear some really, you know, how hurtful some of the things that are – that go on in the classroom. And so I think that is part of the journey to creating programming and curriculum that is inclusive, respectful of diversity, and begins by actually listening to people who are affected. Our Diversity Committee, it has always included faculty and then an alumni and students, and staff, and so we’ve invited the leaders of these student groups to attend the Diversity Committee, to try to work together. And again, they come and go as they choose. They're not voting members, but perspective is important. So I think there is a phase, and it’s probably ongoing, where you have to really start to understand what the issues are at a very personal level. And really making it more visible. When I hear the things that are happening in the classroom, things that professors are saying that are extremely hurtful – I'm almost 100% sure they have no 167 idea that they're hurtful – because of, you know, just a lack of understanding of what the reality is for people who are not in sort of the dominant cultural group” (Participant Interview, Aug 7, 2019). The participant detailed how groups of students at their school disclosed that they were being verbally harmed by specific teachers’ pedagogies and comments in the classroom. Further in the interview, Simranpal defined these groups as: international students, LGBTQ students, ‘visible minority’ students, and Indigenous students. Hill Collins (2019) asserts that intersectionality focuses on the “interconnectedness of categories of race, class, gender, sexuality, ethnicity, nationality, age, and ability sheds new light on how local and social inequities articulate within global social phenomena” (p. 22). As such, it should be noted that students (and teachers) do and can exist at the intersections of these multiple identities. After hearing from students, Simranpal felt compelled to invite them to participate in their department’s “Diversity Committee”. Simranpal’s intention was to provide the student groups a platform to voice their perspectives on addressing health and social inequities within their own program. Here, my analysis suggests that the use of the term ‘diversity’ may be invoked to signify a collective of department members tasked to address the representation of students and faculty and worldsenses across the intersections of racialized identity, gender, citizenship, sexuality, and more. This is in line with Ahmed’s (2017) assertions that “diversity is a human resource…and complaint is diversity work: what we have to do to dismantle the structures that do not accommodate us” (p. 4). In the narrative above, the ‘diverse’ students are invited (presumably unpaid) to participate as non-voting members. Their involvement on the diversity committee can be interpreted to represent the 168 work of diversity and complaint. The excerpt above also addresses the teachers against which students lodged complaints. From their perspective, Simranpal posits that some teachers do not realize how much hurt and pain they are inflicting on students when evoking particular pedagogies in classrooms. One analysis could suggest that the participant is attempting to empathize with all members of their department involved in this ‘complaint’ process. The interview passages detailed above demonstrate resistance from students that some participants faced when attempting to apply Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in their practice. They also demonstrate the harm that can be created when some faculty members unintentionally ignore the need for Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in their own teaching. In the following section, I briefly examine some adaptations teachers and administrators have made over time to navigate the emotional and spiritual cost of implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. 7.4. Detecting, Interpreting, and Preparing for the Emotional and Spiritual Costs In the Third Eye Seeing project, participants described various ways to cope, adapt, with and engage with the exhaustion, burnout, and challenges of attempting to implement Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies within institutions. The following paragraphs give a glimpse into how the participants detect, interpret, and prepare for the embodied pain associated with using Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies to inform Canadian NursMed Education. To begin, Simranpal, an administrator in Nursing, shared perspectives on addressing the mental health impact on faculty members, 169 “So we’re trying to do stuff in our own school and I think part of it is also addressing the mental health of the faculty. We are trying to do some work with our own faculty and recognizing there are some issues, challenges that we need to better understand and address” (Participant Interview, Aug 7, 2019). In the statement above, the participant expresses their need to ‘recognize...some issues’ and make changes in their human resources practices, pedagogies, and workplace culture to better support teachers. In Simranpal’s department, the two main teachers who practiced Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies were racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour. This finding is consistent with recent research that demonstrates how everyday forms of racism and racialization can influence physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual health, as well as faculty members' capacities to pursue their pedagogical practices and research (Henry et al., 2017, p. 116). Gianleen, an educator and administrator in both Nursing and Medicine, shared their interpretations of wellness and preparing for the emotional and spiritual costs of approaching teaching through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, “It's always a work in progress. The life-long process. And so, what's important is situating yourself as a teacher of whatever it is you're teaching. For me, about combining that orientation of who I am, reclaiming and also giving myself permission to my Indigeneity… 170 So, I think we're doing the best we can. We're moving and in this state of flux together. You know, thank goodness for thought leaders who share their amazing work with us, right?” (Participant Interview, April 5, 2019). Here Gianleen shared their perspective of ‘moving…together’ as colleagues in a university department. The participant describes the importance of turning to ‘thought leaders’ as a practice they use to stay grounded in their role. In an earlier part of the interview transcript, Gianleen referenced Marie Battiste (2016), Shawn Wilson (2020), Margaret Kovach (2019), Sakej Youngblood Henderson (2019), and contributors to the TRC Calls to Action (2015) and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (United Nations, 2007) as thought leaders. I sensed that Gianleen builds up motivation and replenishes their health by reading teachings passed down in the form of scholarly literature, policy documents, and creative writing. From another perspective, Jagdeep, a participant in Nursing, shared their own experience of extending empathy and compassion towards colleagues as a necessary adaptation in their practice of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, “Maybe that’s happening now but when many of these professors in Nursing that I work with were trained in Nursing school they were not trained on this. So, you know, you can’t really be upset that people just don’t feel prepared. It’s not the people who are resistant but the people who don’t feel prepared because they did not get that education. 171 I mean of course, I got that education. I’m a [social scientist]. This is what we do. So you know, I can’t be upset if other people don’t understand it. Nursing doesn’t train you around race, scholarship and settler colonialism. So I also have to be patient. I don’t take the approach of blaming. I have to be patient that this is not what they were trained to do. Can’t blame them for that” (Participant Interview, May 7, 2019). Here Jagdeep suggested that many current educators in Canadian NursMed Education are often not trained in theories, epistemologies, and ontologies beyond the fields of Nursing and Medicine. The participant describes how, knowing this, they use patience and avoid ‘the approach of blaming’ to gently promote a wider acceptance and application of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies among their colleagues. Here I suggest that Jagdeep evokes the principles of “gentle pedagogy” which can be used in settings where the environment in which one is teaching is “substantially more conservative” than one’s own perspectives (Michalowski, 1977, p. 69). At the same time, it could be interpreted that Jagdeep uses this strategy to shield themselves from colleagues’ reactions that may include blaming “others with less social power for their discomfort” (DiAngelo, 2018, p. 113). In this way, the participant could be changing their approach to pedagogy to soften the emotional and spiritual costs of implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Excerpts from participant observations of classrooms also illustrate how a change in physical location can mitigate some of the emotional and spiritual pain of teaching through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, 172 “I briefly chatted with Sukhi and Anandkaur at the end of class today. I thanked them for allowing me into space and hosting the day at the [Indigenous learning center] on campus, which has such a strong, positive spiritual energy. They told me how they had Elder [name] and [journalist] who visited today come last year and do a similar presentation, only the class was held in one of the big medical school lecture halls. Sukhi mentioned how different the atmosphere and engagement with the topic was just based on the space they were in. Moreover, they shared that Elder [name] was, in their view, so much more reserved the previous year. Sukhi describes that Elder [name] shared that they felt so triggered by being a settler-colonial style lecture hall at [university]. It reminded them of the traumas their families have absorbed in the walls of Residential and Day Schools as described in the TRC. Interestingly, just a few weeks before, I was in one of those big lecture rooms observing a medical school class. I noticed how sterile and energetically neutral the physical classroom felt. As if the land and spirits were not allowed in. This feeling was further signified by a printed sign on the lecture hall doors that advertised ‘absolutely no food or drink allowed’… apparently water and plants, our life-sources, are not welcome inside” (Participant observation, Sept 30, 2019; Participant observation, Sept 9, 2019). 173 In the field notes above, the participants, and myself as the researcher, comment on how the physical layout and design, as well as the spiritual tone and energy of a classroom, can influence teacher’s capacities to engage with Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. I propose that the physical learning space in Canadian NursMed Education can work towards healing or aggravating the ‘soul wound’, especially for Indigenous Peoples (Duran and Duran, 1995; Duran, 2006; Ahenakew, 2019). Through the oral stories of Elders, Duran (2006) describes the ‘soul wound’ as, “the ancestral wounding that occurred in the community passed down through the generations. Between the years of 1870 to 1900, at least 80% of the population had been systematically exterminated. In addition, [The Elders] explained how the earth had been wounded and how, when the earth is wounded, the people who are caretakers of the earth also are wounded at a very deep soul level” (p. 16). The quote above specifically addresses the impact of settler-colonialism on Indigenous Peoples, humans as caretakers of the Earth, and the health of the Earth. In the field notes excerpt above, both of these aspects of the soul wound are represented through the change in the Nursing classroom, and the sign on the doors of the Medical classroom. The observation above also links to pedagogical movements of ‘land-based learning’ which emphasizes embedding learning in the ecologies, materials, and spiritual energies of particular geographies (Simpson, 2014; Mashford-Pringle & Stewart, 2019). Land-based learning highlights a return to land, such as in learning spaces, as a necessary pedagogical step towards decolonization. Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies also emphasize 174 incorporating the return of land stewardship to Indigenous Peoples and moves away from the concepts of land ownership. In this way, re-imagining the space in which teaching takes place can influence Canadian NursMed Education as an upstream determinant of health. However, it also raises the issue of applying land-based learning and spaces in crowded curriculums and in universities as institutions that are complicit in land theft and the displacement of Indigenous Peoples (Tuck & Yang, 2012, Youngblood Henderson, 2019). The fieldnotes excerpt above also highlights the spiritual dimensions of teaching, and questions the place of concepts such as ‘open secularism’ and fostering connections to Consciousness or Goddexx or Universe in Canadian NursMed Education (Colorado, 2020). I will elaborate on this point further in Chapter 8: Discussion. In brief, attention to the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual needs of teachers is one of many conditions necessary to engage Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. In this way, the participants demonstrate that consciousness-raising is not only about the readings or theories shared in the curriculum. Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies also necessitate conscious attention to how bodies, minds, and spirits react to and with the teachings. In the interview excerpts and fieldnotes above, I have attempted to share examples of what I understood to be adaptations made by participants to navigate the emotional and spiritual costs of ‘gesturing towards’ Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies (Ahenakew, 2019; Elwood et al., 2019). 175 7.5 Summary In summary, the Third Eye Seeing project findings presented in this chapter provide a starting point to examine the emotional and spiritual costs of teaching through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. The sets of stories and data elaborate on the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual challenges of applying critical pedagogies in modern Canadian NursMed Education. I highlighted how some participants, especially those that self-identify as Indigenous and/or people of colour, are faced with the task of receiving negative reactions, and prodding at and making visible individual and collective ‘soul wounds’. I also suggest that digital technologies (laptops, phones, tablets, etc.) may undermine teachers’ capacities to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. By creating extra noise, distracting technologies can act as vehicles for constant advertising, and divert students (and faculty) from critically examining settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice. In Chapter 8, the Discussion, I analyze some of these findings in the context of emerging literature, and the implications for attempting to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. 176 Chapter 8: Discussion & Implications: Opening up the Third Eye The purpose of the Third Eye Seeing project is to contribute to the ongoing development of Canadian NursMed Education and efforts to redress deepening, intersecting health and social inequities. In this chapter, I draw on an analysis of the findings presented in Chapters 5, 6 and 7 to inform the advancement of pedagogy, or philosophies of teaching, in service of the purpose above. As detailed in the methodology, I conducted a thematic analysis informed by ‘colonial power relations’ (Gunaratram, 2003) and ‘interpretive description’ (Thorne, 2016) of interviews with participants and select classroom observations. In particular, based on critical literature in nursing, medicine, and educational studies, this dissertation focuses on possibilities for implementing the niche of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies are not a catch-all for all theories related to social justice. For instance, in this manuscript, I have intentionally chosen to limit the use of frameworks such as whiteness, anti-oppression, or race-based theories for two reasons. Firstly, there is a wealth of scholarship currently being conducted through these lenses in Canada and beyond (Annamma et al., 2018; Campbell, 2020; Johnstone & Lee, 2020). The scholarship of critical race studies and its applications with regard to higher educational contexts has a robust lineage in Canadian borders, and continues to receive important attention in 2020 and beyond (Razack, Smith, Thobani, 2010; Scholar Strike, 2020). Secondly, I explore the research questions through the lenses of decolonization and intersectionality in an effort to create worlds where racialization has been fully composted as a process (Gilroy, 2000; Brown, 2017). Gilroy (2000) shares, “the idea that action against 177 racial hierarchies can proceed more effectivity when it has been purged of any lingering respect for the idea of race is one of the most persuasive cards in this political and ethical suit” (p. 13)20. In my case for instance, in as many instances as possible, I aim to compost any notion of my own “Brown-ness”, as I find the color line forecloses any possibility of nuance. Moreover, race necessarily requires a comparison to someone outside of ‘us/me’ (Who am I ‘Brown’ in relation to? Who else is ‘Brown’ in this space and who are their ancestors? Are we creating a silence and erasure?). As such, in this dissertation, I aim to cycle away from race as a social concept. Nonetheless, terms like ‘people of colour’ are still commonly circulating raciological terms, used by participants, researchers, and everyday discourse, that the reader will come across in the dissertation. In Chapter 5, the interview and observations revealed four common ‘institutional features’ that many participants referred to as influencing pedagogical approaches in Canadian NursMed Education: Crowded Curriculum, Academic Freedom, Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action, and Admissions. In Chapter 6, I explored the participants’ attempts to apply Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in everyday classroom settings. Finally, in Chapter 7, the emotional and spiritual costs of integrating Decolonial, 20 It should be noted here that the argument of moving away/gesturing away from race, racism, raciological thinking, and racialization is a controversial one. These four concepts are complex and deeply engrained in the make-up of our societies and social framing (especially in relation to health care). For instance, Gilroy himself has spoken about the challenge of ‘removing’ race altogether in public consciousness – primarily due to the use of race as a founding principle of white supremacy and the transatlantic slave trade in settler-colonial nations like the US (Koshy, 2021). I certainly echo the understanding that race and racism is still the dominant way in which many people living in the borders of Canada make sense of social differences. Moreover, race is still an organizing principle in legislation (e.g. use of ‘visible minorities’) and colloquial lexicon. However, in general, I find in my practice and in research I am leading, after acknowledging the presence of racialized hierarchies in colonial institutions, ancestral lineage becomes a more useful framework to move towards decolonial, intersectional pedagogies. 178 Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education were made apparent through the interview excerpts and the observational field notes. Overall, an analysis of the Findings in Chapters 5, 6, and 7 suggests that the development of Canadian NursMed Education likely requires unlearning patterns of modernity, especially settler-colonialism, and moving towards decolonial, intersectional futures. This shift necessarily includes a significant examination of biomedical dominance and the expectations of constant growth in Canadian NursMed Education. The work I did during the dissertation illuminated the extent to which the majority of Canadian NursMed Education still operates largely within the biomedical model of health. Biomedicine is, obviously, highly effective and essential for addressing some very important aspects of health (e.g. reducing maternal mortality, generating a COVID-19 vaccine, and more lifesaving interventions). However, in the coming decades there is a great need for the revitalization of Indigenous and diasporic modalities of healing that integrate holism and tend to the soul wound. As many scholars have discussed, it can be said that the biomedical model of health takes a secular, individual-centric approach, in which illness or ‘disease’ is caused by microorganisms and/or biochemical imbalances in the body. On this basis, disease is often defined as a biophysical malfunction and the goal of treatment is to correct the malfunction to cure the disease. This model can tend to stress pathophysiology and focus solely on the treatment of the specific disease/symptom with little scope for the role of relationality, addressing the soul wound, or seeing the larger structures of society that shape health (Ahenakew, 2011; Lock & Nguyen, 2010). 179 Part of redressing health inequities involves re-imagining pedagogy in Canadian NursMed Education from critical epistemological and practical perspectives. At the present moment, while writing the Third Eye Seeing manuscript, I do observe some aspects of modernity beginning to wilt, ferment, and ready to be broken down organically. In Chapter 8, I discuss Third Eye Seeing as a heuristic tool to conduct an analysis of the findings presented above, salient literature, and the current context of surges in social justice movements, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the potential “end of the [modern] world” (Brown et al., 2019; Stein et al., 2020). My aim for this chapter is to highlight opportunities for deepening into Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies and share hopeful examples of cycling into decolonial, equitable, and socially just futures in Canadian NursMed Education. 8.1 Third Eye Seeing as heuristic in Canadian NursMed Education. As stated in Chapter 3, Third Eye seeing is conceptualized in this dissertation as being in direct solidarity with Two-Eyed Seeing. The pedagogies are synergistic, and in my view, one must deeply connect Two-Eyed Seeing and Third Eye Seeing together. Third Eye Seeing puts extra emphasis and evolutionary pressure on members of settler and arrivant diasporas (myself included) to drastically change out of settler-colonial relationships with land that exist in institutions, communities, and everyday life. From the learnings of project 180 participants, my teachers, mentors, and ancestors, one conceptualization of Third Eye Seeing in Canadian NursMed Education is one where: - Indigenous communities are financially, politically, ecologically, and spiritually supported to direct approaches to health education, and human progress, success, and development. Through Third Eye Seeing, one can include meaningful input from Indigenous, settler, and arrivant diasporas in Canada and globally. - Teachers, students, and researchers go beyond binary categorizations of people (e.g. Racialized as White/Racialized as BIPOC, Indigenous/Settler, Religious/Secular, Citizen/Non-Citizen) to consider how intersectionality and multiple positionalities of people can be approached pedagogically in critical ways. In this way, we can open up two, three, and even more eyes. - Many ancestral health modalities are accessible, approached critically through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, and accompany biomedical approaches to community health and wellness. Moreover, there is room for ‘braiding’ multiple perspectives together through mutual respect. - Indigenous Peoples and nations are supported in continued land sovereignty, (which can include the yielding of land titles of universities in which Canadian NursMed Education is based). 181 In short, Third Eye Seeing is a heuristic that can be applied in solidarity with Two-Eyed Seeing. After doing the basics of opening up two-eyes, Third Eye Seeing can support teachers, students, and institutions of education and health care to imagine what futures are possible through decolonial, intersectional pedagogies. Finally, Third Eye Seeing can make space for and serve as a reminder to consider worldsenses from the Global South/East that are considered neither Western medicine, nor Indigenous knowledges. In the following pages, I present an analysis of findings in Chapters 5, 6, and 7. I pay particular attention to the presence of and space for Third Eye Seeing in Canadian NursMed Education. I begin each section with a personal story that contextualizes the discussion of findings based on my positionality below. 8.2 Third Eye Seeing and the Institutional Features of Canadian NursMed Education 8.2.1 Examining the implications of Crowded Curriculum, Academic Freedom, Admissions, and TRC Calls to Action The research suggests that certain institutional features contribute to the struggles, complexities, and adaptations of integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies or ‘Third Eye Seeing’ in Canadian NursMed Education. I also find that the institutional features identified (Crowded Curriculum, Academic Freedom, Admissions, and TRC Calls to Action) are in a state of rapid flux as departments are quickly adapting to social justice led Calls to Action and teaching primarily online during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the following section, I weave together an analysis of the findings in Chapter 5: Institutional Features of 182 Canadian NursMed Education through the lens of Third Eye Seeing described above. This project calls attention to pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education as upstream determinants of health for individuals, communities, nations, and the planet. 8.2.2 Crowded Curriculum & Constant Consumption Crowded curriculum is a main institutional feature of Canadian NursMed Education. It can be interpreted as a symptom of settler-colonialism, and may contribute to growing, intersecting health and social inequities. Based on one analysis of the findings, a crowded curriculum is one aspect of the “epistemic privilege of modernity” (Mignolo, 2002, p. 927). One assumption of modernity is that consuming knowledge, technology, and resources in an increasing, exponential, linear time-based trajectory is the ‘right way’ to engage in pedagogy within Canadian NursMed Education. This approach can reproduce pedagogies of memorizing ‘objective’ scientific facts and the measurement of knowledge through examination. In this way, there can be a privileging of rationalistic knowledges that view the body as a machine, and health care provision as mechanical (rather than social, healing, spacious, collaborative, etc.) act. The Third Eye Seeing findings demonstrate that the epistemological underpinnings of modernity show up in many ways in Canadian NursMed Education, including hierarchies of healing modalities and ongoing burn out in faculty and students due to the daily demands of a crowded curriculum in nursing and medical programs. 183 8.2.3 Academic Freedom and Admissions The racialized, ancestral, spiritual, and bordered divisions of labour in Canadian NursMed Education are also shifting. Since the start of the Third Eye Seeing project in 2015, universities in Canada have seen a significant increase in calls for diversifying the 1) ancestral and racialized make-up of faculty, 2) approaches to pedagogy, and 3) approaches to student wellbeing and participation. In Chapter 5, Findings A, the participants’ stories and classroom observations point to features of the university and Canadian NursMed Education such as Accreditation and Crowded Curriculum that pose significant challenges to the second of the two calls – pluralism in pedagogy, especially from decolonial, intersectional perspectives. One of the leading Canadian scholars on anti-Blackness and anti-racism in Canadian universities writes, “Canada is in the midst of a demographic revolution, one that is ushering in a great social transformation in the constitution of Canadian society…what remains remarkably resistant to change…is its major governing institutions” (Smith, 2018, p. 43). An evolution towards more ‘diverse’ faculty may facilitate change through the integration of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, especially if teachers have had previous education in social justice, health equity, and critiquing settler-colonialism. At the present moment, some researchers and faculty members posit that “academic freedom itself is seen as one of the practices that “reinforce[s] an ‘institutional culture of denial’ that promotes resistance to equity programs and practices (198).” (Henry & Tator in Grayson, 2010, p. 1019). One aspect of the Third Eye Seeing findings support the notion that due to Academic Freedom, the burden of teaching through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies often falls on 184 one or two faculty members per nursing or medicine school who show dedication to the work of social justice, and who are often the one of the few faculty racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour. Yet, the findings also reveal that Academic Freedom allows teachers in Canadian NursMed Education to largely determine their own syllabus, choice of readings, format (and sometimes location) of the class, and more aspects of pedagogy that foster understandings of privilege, power, creativity, empathy, perception, and co-operation – all aspects of Third Eye Seeing. In my own experience as a new sessional instructor teaching in Social Justice and Health Professions Education departments, I notice freedom to re-invent syllabi and pedagogy based on current social and ecological conditions, which affords a malleability and agility in negotiating the changing terrain of teaching in Canadian NursMed Education. I suggest that the positive implications of Academic Freedom as an institutional feature may outweigh the sedimentation of pedagogy that can come from allowing teachers to dictate their own curriculum and approaches to teaching. There are emerging trends in policy and practice that supplement Academic Freedom to increase the potentials of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. At the same time, Academic Freedom is in conversation with federal, provincial (or state), and municipal educational policies. As mentioned in Chapter 2: Literature Review, government legislation can mandate the inclusion to exclusion of particular pedagogies from nursing and medical schools (State of Washington Senate, 2021; Williams, 2021). 185 8.2.4 Punctuated Equilibrium and TRC Calls to Action Some ways to alleviate the pain of crowded curriculum and Academic Freedom is institutional adoption of Indigenous sovereignty and social justice activist initiated living policy documents such as the Truth & Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action. The data and stories in this dissertation point to the ways that interventions such as the TRC catalyze evolutionary leaps towards Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies through a process that political scientists and biologists alike call “punctuated equilibrium” (Durnova et al., 2016; Wosniack et al., 2017). In political economy theory, punctuated equilibrium is used to characterize, “the policy process as abrupt shifts and long periods of stability or incremental change separating the shifts” (Durnova et al., 2016, p. 96, emphasis added). In this dissertation, the participant stories and classroom observations demonstrate how the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action publication in 2015 a trauma-induced abrupt policy shift that, in some ways, marks the beginning of the current period of social change culminating in 2021. The Third Eye Seeing data shows an increase in institutional actions that have been seemingly impossible in previous years. Some examples from the Third Eye Seeing findings include brand new course creation, cluster hiring of faculty racialized as Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour, movements towards land-based pedagogy, and diversification of worldsenses. In evolutionary biology theory, researchers find that most species (including humans homo sapiens) also exhibit a punctuated equilibrium approach to change, formation, and diversification in their terrestrial evolution. Wosniack et al. (2017) share, 186 “data seem to indicate that long-term evolution is characterized by bursts of high evolutionary changes followed by metastable configurations. Such intermittency is known as punctuated equilibrium, with the punctuation corresponding to high activity (hectic) phases followed by periods of stasis” (p. 113) What I notice from Third Eye Seeing participant interviews, classroom observations, and the current state of flux in humanity, is a moment of ‘high activity’ towards Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. In this way, Third Eye Seeing takes a ‘long view/sense’ of how intersecting health and social inequities manifest across space and time. The implications of Third Eye Seeing for Canadian NursMed Education include teachers witnessing the need for rapid adaptation through meta-level thinking and practice. Meta-level praxis using Third Eye Seeing pays attention to the implementation of everyday classroom pedagogy in relation to social processes such as the slow death of modernity (Brown et al., 2019; Maynard, 2017; Mignolo, 2002; Stein et al., 2020). On a hopeful note, across the duration of the Third Eye Seeing project, I have witnessed larger cohorts of teachers in Canadian NursMed Education exhibiting moves of radical action toward health equity and social justice. 8.2.5 Recommendations based on Chapter 5 Findings. Based on the data and literature reviewed for this dissertation, I suggest the following recommendations for Canadian NurMed Education: 187 - Cultivate inner conscious awareness, partnerships, and pedagogies that integrate multiple worldsenses of health and healing through Third Eye Seeing among faculty, staff, and students. This can look like supporting all members of Canadian NursMed Education to explore their own ancestral lineages. This exploration can lead to a deeper awareness of our own complicities in settler-colonialism, and reveal ways of being that can promote decolonization and intersectional collaboration in health care. - Providing additional departmental support to mitigate effects of burn-out. This can take the form of: hiring experts outside of the department, paying members of the department financial honorariums and/or financial resources and related support for engaging in Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies; moving past predominant reliance on the most visible advocates of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, to structural integration across the institution, such that the work load is shared and held by everyone. Examining the circulation of money, time, and energy is one aspect of unlearning settler-colonialism. - Continually construct strategic plans in Canadian NursMed Education and action steps that go beyond modern epistemologies and meaningfully integrate living policy documents such as the TRC Calls to Action (and now the wide range of statements and reports on dismantling structural racism, ecological destruction, and border imperialism). - Take rapid action towards the rematriation of land that Canadian NursMed Education campuses are on to the local Indigenous nations and communities, especially now 188 while the majority of campus visitors are working from home. As shared in Chapter 3, decolonization refers to the rematriation (giving back) of Indigenous land and life21. 8.3 Third Eye Seeing and the Complexities of Integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education In the present moment, during the course of the Third Eye Seeing project, my homelands of Punjab and South Asia have in general has seen a rise in polarization, COVID19 oxygen crisis, increase in pollution, and a rise in political unrest in part due to the continued suppressed of minority religions (with similar movements happening across the globe including the borders of Canada). This present moment builds on experiences of settler-colonialism in South Asia, most recently with the fall of the British Raj in 1947. Hxrstorically, the Punjab region of modern day India and Pakistan is known as the Land of 5 Rivers, (Punj – Five, Aab – Water). The 5 rivers Sutlej, Beas, Ravi, Chenab, and Jhelum flow through, forming braids of fresh water used for drinking, ceremony, and healing. Along the waterways of Punjab, my ancestors have lived in various states of pluralism and spiritual cohesion with the land. In the coming pages, I draw inspiration from the braided rivers and spiritualities of Punjab to illustrate how the participants I interviewed and observed attempt to integrate Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. 21 Currently, there are precedents of Canadian municipalities and private developers transferring land title to local Indigenous nations. For instance, in my home university of UBC located in Vancouver, the City of Vancouver rematriated the village of Cpəsnaʔəm in South Vancouver to the Musqueam First Nation. 189 A main purpose of the Third Eye Seeing project is to highlight Canadian NursMed Education as an upstream determinant of health. Notably, this manuscript suggests that the integration of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies can positively impact teachers and students capacity to understand and attend to the root causes of health and social inequities. The research suggests that project participants aimed to circumvent culturalism as a primary pedagogical lens in Canadian NursMed Education; implement recommendations from Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, Anti-Racism, and Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action, and attempted to engage Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in practice. In the following section, I highlight key analytical insights into the complexities of Third Eye Seeing in everyday classroom settings. Notably, as highlighted in the story of Punjab above, I foreground the concept of “braiding” (Elwood et al., 2019), and its significance for interpreting the findings in this dissertation. 8.3.1 Pathologization and Culturalism The Third Eye Seeing research draws attention to a major need to problematize the pathologization of Indigenous Peoples to diasporic peoples from the Global South/East in Canadian NursMed Education (Ahenakew, 2011; Browne, 2005; Gray, 2016; McGibbon et al., 2014; Shields et al., 2005). Many research participants discussed how the case examples and/or guest speakers they have used in classrooms have potentially served to re-inscribe colonial, culturalist ways of treating people racialized, bordered, and religiously categorized as ‘the Other’ (Linklater, 2014; McConaghy, 2000; Said, 1985). This claim is further evidenced through the deaths of Brian Sinclair and Joyce Echaquan and ongoing Indigenous 190 specific systemic racism at hospitals and additional health care settings (Brian Sinclair Working Group, 2017; Dion Stout et al., 2021; McCallum & Perry, 2018). An analysis of the observational field notes shows that conscious, subconscious, and unconscious pathologization and the gravitational pull of culturalism still continues in Canadian NursMed Education today. 8.3.2 Pluralism and Collective Awareness I observed and noted that some teachers strategically used the radical integration of pluralism and multiple worldsenses of health to gesture away from pathologization and culturalism and towards Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. In the Third Eye Seeing project, radical action was taken by holding classes in physical spaces that have been designed through decolonial, and trauma-informed practices. Some teachers also used the practice of locating their own positionality and privileges before jumping into the class content, drawing on the concepts of subjectivity, power, and critical epistemology from intersectionality praxis. Additionally, many participants aimed to “nourish the learning spirit” in their students, which Battiste (2013) describes as, “Self-reflection and emerging from the chains of the oppressive situations one has been conditioned to be in. Some of the most important work…is found in the selfreflective narratives that help [students] understand their own situation and what has held them there” (p. 71). 191 In this way, I witnessed Third Eye Seeing participants set intentions and use pedagogies in service of ‘consciousness raising’ (Brown et al., 2017), a common tool in social justice activism. In observing, listening to, and analyzing teachers experiences of integrating Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, I also notice the significant tensions in some aspects of the work, such as the place of spirituality in Canadian NursMed Education in relation to shifting knowledges and Third Eye Seeing (Ahenakew, 2011; Battiste, 2013; Colorado, 2020; Dei & Jaimangul, 2018; Kaur Singh, 2005; Prabhakar, 2018; Reimer-Kirkham, 2019). 8.3.3 Braiding Multiple Worldsenses Scholars who have significantly informed the Third Eye Seeing project refer to this apparent incommensurability of worldsenses as the difference between ‘brick and thread sensibilities’ in Canadian NursMed Education (Elwood et al., 2019). To support the revitalization of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies the authors point to the process of ‘braiding’, which was introduced in Chapter 1. They write, “Braiding is not a form of synthesis in which two approaches are combined in order to create a new possibility to replace them both…nor is it the result of an antagonism in which one side emerges triumphant over the other. Instead, braiding is premised on respecting the continued internal integrity of both the brick and thread orientations, even as neither side is static or homogenous, and even as both sides might transform in the process of braiding.” (Elwood et al., 2019, p. 21) 192 According to one analysis of the Third Eye Seeing findings, in Canadian NursMed Education brick sensibilities take the shape of perspectives such as biomedical dominance, ‘inclusion’ frameworks, crowded curriculum, and culturalism. Thread sensibilities emerge through the presence of Indigenous ways of knowing, solidarity building, and attention to dismantling settler-colonialism. I suggest that one can add in a third sensibility, beads, to represent epistemologies of the Global South/East that represent a third strand of ‘braiding’ Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. For instance, Ayurveda is an epistemology of health born in South Asia that is neither biomedicine, nor an Indigenous knowledge system. Ayurveda emerged through the fusion of Dravidian Indigenous knowledges originating in East Africa and what’s now South India and Sri Lanka; with Aryan settler knowledges from Central Asia (LaFleur-Gangji, 2020). In this way, Ayurveda represents a fused sensibility (or bead) from the Global South/East which offers complimentary perspectives on health and wellbeing. Moreover, the philosophies of Ayurveda may be integrated as pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education to help heal the soul wound within health care institutions. In this way, I build on the concept that, “Braiding opens up different possibilities for engagement, without guarantees about what might emerge from those engagements. Braiding is not an endpoint, but rather an ongoing and emergent process” (p. 21). 193 Given that braiding is something ongoing, Third Eye Seeing can support the process through the use of the imagination energy center of our collective consciousness as teachers in Canadian NursMed Education. 8.3.4 Recommendations based on Chapter 6 Findings Based on the Third Eye Seeing findings in Chapter 6, I share the following recommendations for Canadian NursMed Education: - Move toward using ‘ancestral lineage’ (e.g. Sikh-Punjabi from modern-day India and Pakistan) and away from ‘racialized identity’ (e.g. Brown) and ‘culture’ (e.g. Indian culture) in pedagogy and classroom settings. In my view, a shift towards sharing our ancestral lineages may allow for the disintegration of the human (racialized as White) vs. non-human (racialized as an Indigenous person and/or person of colour) binary created by settler-colonialism in Canada. - Teach and facilitate pedagogies that allow teachers and students to release their own trauma and collective trauma, in service of training the next generation of nurses and doctors who will be caring for the Canadian population. My observation is that healing the trauma of settler-colonialism is often considered something one does privately in their home or with a therapist. Classrooms and teaching can be seen as “official” or “formal” spaces in which emotions and feelings are to be suppressed in service of learning from the mind. Instead, I am suggesting that collective trauma 194 healing can happen safely in classrooms, and can complement mind and/or theory based discussions of health and social inequities. - Continue to update physical and virtual Canadian NursMed Education classroom spaces, through working with and paying Indigenous architects, interior designers, and online course designers, and approaching classroom spaces. During the project, I heard from several participants about the importance of feeling comfortable and safe in classrooms. Moreover, participants shared how the recognition of multiple worldsenses in physical spaces acted as a facilitator of Third Eye Seeing. 8.4 (Ad)dressing and Healing the Soul Wound in Canadian NursMed Education During the course of starting and completing my doctoral work, I had my own experiences with healing the “soul wound” of settler-colonialism and deepening, intersecting health and social inequities in my personal and professional lives (Ahenakew, 2019; Duran and Duran, 1995). Throughout the project, I have also been teaching in Social Justice and Health Professions Education departments, experiencing first-hand the emotional and spiritual costs of implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. In the following paragraphs, I present an analysis of this phenomenon in Third Eye Seeing participants’ stories and the classroom observations. 195 8.4.1 Examining Resistances and Supports to Third Eye Seeing The purpose of the Third Eye Seeing is to investigate the potentials and complexities of implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. In the following section, I situate the Third Eye Seeing findings from Chapter 7 in relation to the wounds of settler-colonialism and modernity more broadly, which have implications for Canadian NursMed Education. The research suggests that participants are engaged in a spectrum of teaching approaches that can align with Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. However, the more educators put energy into this work, the more likely they are to experience an emotional and spiritual cost to their own wellbeing. Notably, this manuscript is written during a time where the traumas of the collective soul wound are erupting and triggered on a national and global scale. At the same time, the COVID-19 pandemic is acting as a force on our species and calling on teachers in Canadian NursMed Education to adapt to a new paradigm of pedagogy, health care, and social justice. 8.4.2 Conscious Use of Digital Technologies For much of Canadian NursMed Education, digital technologies hold bright promises. Yet, a closer look “under the surface” (Song, 2002, p. xi) at the shadow reveals a possible reproduction of colonial hierarchies. I argue that digital technologies, especially when acting as a distraction, can limit the reach of Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. This can also extend more broadly to the entire institution of universities. 196 For instance, it would be incredibly challenging for Canadian universities to divest from their mining interests (one of many calls to action from social justice movements), because without precious minerals (of the 17 rare Earth metals, 16 are included in smartphones, laptops, and tablets (Nield, 2015)) the modern university ostensibly cannot function. In this way, the use of laptops, smartphones, and tablets are one seemingly inescapable yet increasingly invisible example of “modernity’s shine” (Andreotti et al., 2015, p. 24), that came up in Third Eye Seeing findings. The vastness of the digital world has also only come about in the last few decades and is symbolic of the particular point in humanity’s existence at the present moment. In my observations of Canadian NursMed Education, I found that many participants aimed to expose students to decolonial, intersectional praxis and critiques of coloniality, however, their teachings may not have been received due to learners’ entanglements and addictions to their digital devices. In this case, “when exposed to critiques that implicate modernity’s shine in the creation of its shadow, those enchanted with the shine tend to resist and deny their complicity in harm.” (Andreotti et al., 2015, p. 24). By their very nature, laptops, phones, and tablets (literally) symbolize the shiny side of modernity, and students in Canadian NursMed Education may be using them to escape their own involvement in the modern system (DiAngelo, 2018). During the current age of online teaching implementation, it can be suggested that the radical integration of ancestral healing modalities such as meditation and mindfulness (such as the practices taught in Buddhism and Ayurveda) can support focused attention among teachers and students. Not only are these practices helpful for teachers to share in relation to peoples’ health and wellbeing, they also work to raise consciousness, self-awareness, and 197 ability to stay present with pedagogy. Moreover, some research suggests that contemplative practices can “inspire an ethic of universal compassion” (Walsh, 2006, p. 32), which is a key tool in engaging in the long-term unlearning of settler-colonialism across lifetimes. 8.4.3 The Soul Pain of Settler-Colonialism and Student Reactions An analysis of the Third Eye Seeing findings, especially in relation to colonial power relations, reveals how participants’ positionalities influenced students’ reactions to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. Writing on the process of decolonizing Canadian education as a whole, scholars note that, “There are long-standing colonial practices that remain deeply entrenched with the educational system and there are significant challenges and complexities in bringing about meaningful change…If we do not talk about debwewin, the truth, we will not get to a place of reconciliation. The truth is in the difficult stories, the harder ones to speak out loud. They are the more difficult ones to hear and listen to because they are stories about injustices, abuse, and genocide. They are painful. Importantly, these stories also lay the basis for understanding why we have so much work to do” (CoteMeek & Moeke-Pickering, 2020, p. xi-xiii). Several times throughout the study, different participants spoke their truths about how their racialized identity, ancestral lineage, and even citizenship (e.g. immigrant status) impacted reception to their approach to teaching. In particular, teachers racialized as 198 Indigenous Peoples and/or people of colour noted some negative responses from students when speaking the truth about settler-colonialism that impacted the teachers’ wellbeing. This finding is in-line with emerging research on the intersections of racialization, decolonization, intersectionality, and pedagogy in Canadian universities. For instance, Wong (2018) shares her own experience implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies and the adaptations she has integrated to reduce the emotional and spiritual costs of doing the work, “Not only did I interrupt the assumptions they would normally attach to the constructed identities of “Asian woman”, I also hoped to prepare them for the challenge and discomfort they would experience when their own self-identities and implication in power imbalances were deconstructed in the course. Indeed, this was what first brought me to a mindfulness-based pedagogy: I needed to sustain my spiritual, emotional, and mental well-being if I were to continue teaching critical social work” (Batacharya & Wong, 2018, p. 258). According to my understanding, the excerpt above paired with the findings of Chapter 7, exhibit examples of how teachers in Canadian NursMed Education notice, scar, and healing parts of the ‘soul wound’ accessible to them in the everyday classroom setting. 199 8.4.4 Linking Roots with Colleagues When it comes to resistance and support from colleagues, an analysis of Third Eye Seeing findings points to the ambivalence of colleagues to Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies. In a few cases, Third Eye Seeing findings point to some teachers being the only ones carrying the load of teaching through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies, without consideration or notice from their colleagues. Some participants found members of their department incredibly supportive, exhibiting what hooks (1994) describes as “critically examining their standpoints and transforming their consciousness as a first stage in the process” (hooks, 1994, p. 117). As we cycle into a new paradigm of social justice, leading activists and organizers continue to share their perspectives on the importance of working in cohesion and collaboration with each other, “Instead of digging its roots deep and solitary into the earth, the oak tree grows its roots wide and interlocks with other oak trees in the surrounding area. And you can’t bring down a hundred oak trees bound beneath the soil! How do we survive the unnatural disasters of climate change, environmental injustice, over-policing, massimprisonment, militarization, economic inequality, corporate globalization, and displacement? We must connect in the underground, my people! In this way, we shall survive” (Penniman quoted in Brown, 2017, p. 54). 200 The need to form underground connections also resonates with the perspectives of the research participants as well as the observational field notes. The participants also discussed how the ongoing publication of Calls to Action such as the TRC and anti-racism statements act as linkage points between themselves and their colleagues in Canadian NursMed Education. Overall, an analysis of the findings reveals that deep and meaningful collaboration, and sharing of the load can mitigate the emotional and spiritual costs of implementing Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies in Canadian NursMed Education. 8.4.5 Recommendations based on Chapter 7 Findings Based on the Third Eye Seeing findings in Chapter 7, I suggest the following recommendations for Canadian NursMed Education: - Spreading the load of teaching through Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies across faculty members, outside experts, guest speakers, sessional instructors, clinical instructors, etc. rather than just one or two teachers in a department. This can allow a sharing of the necessary work across many perspectives, bodies, minds, and energetic fields. - Integrating ‘land as pedagogy’ and the interconnection between achieving social justice and living in meaningful, healthy relationships with each other and the Earth (Simpson, 2014; Mashford-Pringle & Stewart, 2019; Tuck et al., 2014). Land as pedagogy is considered a practice of Indigenous resistance and learning. I see it as a 201 way of revitalizing ways of being in relation to land with honour and mutual respect, and as a way of expanding the range of pedagogies that can address the “soul wound” in Canadian borders and beyond. The Third Eye Findings show that some dominant pedagogies of Canadian NursMed Education view land as something from which to extract more and more ‘resources’ to make medical devices, new pharmaceuticals, and the ‘properties’ on which universities exist. Land as pedagogy is what Simpson (2014) calls a “Nishnaabeg intelligence” that “generates…inter-dependent, selfregulating community minded individuals” (p. 7). In this way, Canadian NursMed Education can make paradigm shifts towards land as pedagogy that are necessary adaptations to survive as a species and humanity in the coming years. 202 8.5 Summary In this dissertation I examined change in a particular critical issue in Canada: deepening, intersecting health and social inequities that are reflective of modernity. Canadian NursMed Education institutions lay the theoretical and practical foundation for the health care labour force and are therefore implicated in the widening gap in inequities. Social justice organizers, policy makers, and researchers alike agree that change takes time and foresight. Canadian NursMed Education can play a role in influencing social change. Drawing on Decolonial, Intersectional Pedagogies and ‘Third Eye Seeing’, Canadian NursMed Education could ostensibly prepare learners to evolve the current paradigm of thinking about human healthiness, success, progress, and development – as processes, conditions and contexts to foster health equity (and mitigate the harms of ongoing inequities). Building on the important work of all the scholars, activists, and community leaders cited in this dissertation, Third Eye Seeing can focus attention on the value of meaningful and respectful engagement with ancestral healing modalities on a global scale, and address intersecting health and social inequities. Through these diverse lenses teachers and students can recognize the intersecting processes that shape the social, natural, metaphysical, and spiritual world with the aims of health equity, social justice, and unlearning/undoing settler-colonialism. 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Intercultural Education, 28(1), 1-19. 250 Appendix: Interview Guide For my PhD dissertation project, I am investigating if and how decolonial, intersectional pedagogies inform Canadian nursing and medical (NursMed) education. The purpose of this study is to contribute to the ongoing development of NursMed education and national efforts to redress health and health care inequities. Briefly, decolonial, intersectional pedagogies are philosophies of learning that encourage teachers and students to reflect on health through the lenses of settler-colonialism, health equity, and social justice. Decolonial, intersectional pedagogies align with recently published strategic frameworks that serve as guide posts for MedNurs education written by organizations such as the Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing (2015), the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada (2015), Public Health Agency of Canada (2018), Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indigenous Residential Schools (2015), and Universities Canada (2017). The goals of decolonial, intersectional pedagogies are to influence MedNurs education as an upstream determinant of health, with the aim of contributing to the education of future health care leaders and professionals with a particular focus on strategies that promote social justice, equity, and Indigenous sovereignty. 251 References: - Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada. (2015). The future of medical education in Canada (FMEC): A collective vision for MD education 2010-2015. Ottawa, ON. - Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing. (2015). National nursing education framework: Final report. Ottawa, ON: CASN. - Public Health Agency of Canada. (2018). Key health inequalities in Canada: A national portrait. Ottawa, ON: PHAC. - Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. (2015). Truth and reconciliation commission of Canada: Calls to action. Winnipeg, MB. - Universities Canada. (2017). Universities Canada principles on equity, diversity, and inclusion. Ottawa, ON. I am asking key informants who are faculty and in key leadership positions in various Canadian MedNurs schools to participate in an in person or virtual interview with me, whichever may be more convenient. I am interested in learning about your perspectives on the role of MedNurs education with respect to addressing social processes that lead to health inequities. [I will describe myself, my position at UBC, and my professional experience]. [Land acknowledgement] This project is supported by funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Your responses are confidential and your real name will not be used in the reporting of findings. 252 My goal is to create an interview process that is non-judgmental, and rather, reflects an opportunity for learning and being curious. [read out consent form and gain verbal consent] 1. How does [NursMed school] highlight the following topics in curriculum: Ethno-cultural diversity? Learning words or phrases in multiple languages? Immigration & Citizenship? Racism? Colonialism? 2. With the exception of a few new schools, the majority of [NursMed] schools in Canada were founded when settlers from Europe starting building cities, urban centers, and public institutions like universities. Can you tell me a little about how you see [NursMed school] as being part of ongoing colonialism in Canada? 3. What are some of the challenges that you’ve faced in talking about ethnocultural diversity, racism, or colonialism in your teaching? PROMPTS: personal, professional, institutional, structural 4. In the last 5 years, activist movements like Black Lives Matter, Idle No More, Justice for Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women, and No One is Illegal have gained momentum. a) Are there efforts is [NursMed school] making to include Indigenous perspectives in curriculum designing? 253 b) Are there efforts is [NursMed school] making to include diverse diasporic perspectives in curriculum designing? 5. When you are writing a syllabus, how do you approach equitable representation of scholars racialized as Black, Indigenous Peoples, and People of Colour scholars as the authors of assigned readings? 6. As you know, everyday there are more and more people immigrating to Canada from across the world. As globalization continues to happen, people tend to migrate along religious lines. This religious diversity is reflected in students, teachers, families, and more. In the interviews I’ve done so far, I notice that people are unsure or don’t have space to talk about the connection between religion & teaching [medicine or nursing]. In your experience, how is religion talked about in [NursMed] school faculty meetings, trainings, or classrooms? PROMPT: news media coverage of Islamophobic terrorism? 7. Canada is an incredibly multicultural country. People with ancestors from over 150+ countries live here today, not to mention the diversity of Indigenous communities. However, for the most part public institutions like universities tend to have Euro-centric philosophies on teaching. In [NursMed education] this can look like curriculum & pedagogies that only teach from a biomedical perspective. Can you tell me a little about how Traditional Chinese Medicine, Ayurveda & Yoga from South Asia, Indigenous healing traditions, African Traditional Medicine, or any additional diverse worldview on health are incorporated into [NursMed school] education? 254 8. No one’s name or identifying information will be published in my dissertation. However, for the purposes of understanding the context of our discussion, can I ask how you would describe your ethno-cultural background? 9. How do you think your ethno-cultural background influences your approach to pedagogy? PROMPTS: Could you share a particular story or example? 10. Finally, how long have you had a career in [NursMed] higher education? 255