This research will marshal a broad array of benefits while establishing Canada as a leader in critical tourism research for reconciliation. Our study will augment Indigenous community research capacities and efforts to maintain cultural narratives and values. Knowledge mobilization activities—including creative community exhibits, short stories, and publications—will further legitimize Indigenous knowledges and relationships to land among academic, tourism, and public audiences. Tourism related experiences in the form of knowledge exchange land camps will be established to model respectful relationships, co-learning, and institutional cooperation in support of Indigenizing settler spaces (e.g., post-secondary education). Students on our team will develop leading edge talent to address contemporary social challenges, while other students will gain knowledge about research processes and findings as applicants incorporate information into courses. Finally, tourism educators and scholars across the globe will benefit as research findings are synthesized into an open-access collection of teaching resources and moral theoretical innovations designed to unsettle settler stories of tourism.
This research is supported by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Grant, 2018-2023.