Jimena Marquez is a multidisciplinary Mexican/Canadian scholar. She has over ten years of teaching experience, most recently in the Indigenous Studies program at McGill University. She received her PhD from the University of Ottawa. Her research focused on Indigenous Canadian scholarship across disciplines, looking specifically at Indigenous Epistemologies and Methodologies and the crucial role that positionality plays in Indigenist research. She is currently the Assistant Director in charge of developing culturally relevant programs for Nunavik at Kativik Ilisarniliriniq, the Inuit school board in charge of Inuit education in Northern Quebec.

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Description
List of Figures and Tables Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1: Journeys into Indigenist Research Chapter 2: The Importance of Relationships in Indigenist Research Chapter 3: Indigenist Methodologies Chapter 4: When Relationships Are Missing from Indigenist Research Chapter 5: Discussing Explicit Positionality with Indigenous Scholars Chapter 6: The Hidden Self: Distorted and Appropriated Positionalities Chapter 7: Protecting Indigenous Knowledge from Distortion Chapter 8: The Evolution of Indigenist Research within Academic Milieux Chapter 9: Strategies to Assure the Integrity of Indigenist Research Chapter 10: In Conversation with Non-Indigenous Scholars Conclusion Afterword Recommended Readings References Author and Contributor Biographies
