| Literature DB >> 34360234 |
Daniel L M Duke1,2, Megan Prictor3,4, Elif Ekinci1, Mariam Hachem1, Luke J Burchill1,2.
Abstract
Indigenous health inequities persist in Australia due to a system of privilege and racism that has political, economic and social determinants, rather than simply genetic or behavioural causes. Research involving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander ('Indigenous') communities is routinely funded to understand and address these health inequities, yet current ethical and institutional conventions for Indigenous health research often fall short of community expectations. Typically, mainstream research projects are undertaken using traditional "top-down" approaches to governance that hold inherent tensions with other dominant governance styles and forms. This approach perpetuates long-held power imbalances between those leading the research and those being researched. As an alternative, Indigenous governance focuses on the importance of place, people, relationships and process for addressing power imbalances and achieving equitable outcomes. However, empowering principles of Indigenous governance in mainstream environments is a major challenge for research projects and teams working within organisations that are regulated by Western standards and conventions. This paper outlines the theoretical basis for a new Culturally Adaptive Governance Framework (CAGF) for empowering principles of Indigenous governance as a prerequisite for ethical conduct and practice in Indigenous health research. We suggest new orientations for mainstream research project governance, predicated on translating theoretical and practical attributes of real-world ethics, adaptive governance and critical allyship frameworks to Indigenous health research. The CAGF is being implemented in a national Indigenous multicenter trial evaluating the use of continuous blood glucose monitors as a new technology with the potential to improve diabetes care and treatment for Indigenous Australians-the FlashGM Study. The CAGF is a governance framework that identifies the realities of power, acknowledges the complexities of culture and emerging health technologies, and foregrounds the principle of equity for mainstream Indigenous health research.Entities:
Keywords: Indigenous governance; adaptive governance; critical allyship; ethics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34360234 PMCID: PMC8345529 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18157943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Definition of key terms for the Culturally Adaptive Governance Framework.
| Key Terms | Definition |
|---|---|
| Governance | Governance is the operational and control mechanisms of a defined system that holds to account people and decisions made relating to ethics, risk, consent and administration that in turn define the overall governance system. |
| Governance System | A set of individual and organisational actors that play a central role in decision-making and policy processes. |
| Governance Modes | The various forms through which governance can be realised. |
| Polycentric Governance | A self-organising governance system that has multiple centres of decision making and is coordinated by an overarching system of rules, rather than being imposed by one powerful actor as might be the case in a strictly hierarchical system where coordination is imposed from the top. |
| System Logic | The beliefs and values, socially and historically constructed, composed of symbols and material practices, by which individuals and organisations give meaning to their activities. |
| Indigenous Governance | A reflection of Indigenous culture, values and traditions expressed as a desire for contemporary self-determination and a need to interface this with broader governance structures of the (Australian) state. |
| Adaptive Governance | An analytical and practical framework for the holistic management of complex problems and governance environments. |
| Indigenousself-determination | Indigenous people’s right to freely pursue social, economic and cultural development as outlined in Article 3 of the United Nations Declarations on the Rights of Indigenous People. |
| Critical Allyship | A practice of learning and unlearning that guides people in positions of privilege to evaluate and re-evaluate their work with marginalised people through understanding health inequalities are produced within in system of structural constraints. |
| Equity * | Social justice or fairness; equity is an ethical concept that is grounded in principles of distributive justice. |
| Ethics | The values and moral principles that form the basis for decision making and conduct in relation to the impact or consequences those moral actions have on all stakeholders. |
* A full discussion on distinctions between ethical theories is beyond the scope of this paper; however, we believe that current ethical guidelines were formulated on a very narrow understanding of ethics and view alternative models relating to teleological, consequentialist ethics to be more appropriate in this context.
Governance styles and their sub-functions—adapted from the governance sub-functions and governance properties in the three governance styles table in Pahl-Wostl (2015) [10].
| Governance Sub-Functions | Hierarchical Style | Market Style | Network Style |
|---|---|---|---|
| Policy Framing | Prescribed by regulation; Expert judgement of problem identification; Focus on prescriptions and command and control instruments | Problem identification based on profitability, cost consideration, market failure; Focus on pricing and market-based instruments | Broad process on problem identification encompassing different perspectives; Focus on voluntary agreements |
| Knowledge | Technocratic focus; Only technical experts involved | Knowledge serves to increase competitive advantage | Knowledge generation as part of group building process; Different types of knowledge acknowledged; Broad sharing of knowledge |
| Resource | Engage actors with political power; Tax; governmental budgets for financing | Engage actors with market power; Investment | Mobilise broad stakeholder support; Voluntary financing |
| Conflict | Jurisdiction; Legal procedures | Survival of the fittest; Compensation payments | Mediation; Aim for consensus |
| Rule Making | Political parliamentary process; Jurisdiction and formal procedures for rule extension if needed | Negotiations on prices; As few rules as possible | Broad negotiation of and deliberations on rules; Malleable rules open to renegotiation |
| Monitoring and Evaluation | Compliance with regulation and quantifiable standards; Rigid in terms of learning | Cost–benefit calculations; | Participatory; Reflection on agreed goals; Openness to adaptive approaches—change negotiated |
| Leadership | Prescribed by formal rules; Command and control | Determined; Delegating and enabling | Often emergent in a process; Coaching and supporting |
| Representativeness | Elected representatives; Technical experts on problem domain | Access for all market players | All voices heard, openness of process; those affected participate in decision-making |
Figure 1Contextual definition of community: purposeful processes of engagement, feedback and learning within a complex, dynamic and everchanging ecosystem.
Systemic Research Design—adapted from the typology of methods for comparative case study research in water governance, based on Pahl-Wostl and Lebel (2009) [42].
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| Social | Diagrams of actor relationships (e.g., power, influence, authority, communication) |
| Organisational | Diagrams of responsibilities and accountability relationships compared | ||
| Systems | Diagrams of governance and other system components | ||
|
| Transitions | Set of variables about same location at different times (e.g., reform process) | |
| Pathways | Pathways of change in different locations | ||
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| Questions | Responses to a common set of analytical questions | |
| Narrative | Integrated descriptions of a governance regime | ||
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| Checklist | Presence/absence of governance attributes | |
| Scoring | Ordinal scale measure of governance attributes |