Chad Walker, Ph.D.

Research - Teaching - Impact

Non-Indigenous partner perspectives on Indigenous peoples' involvement in renewable energy: exploring reconciliation as relationships of accountability or status quo innocence?


Journal article


Chad Walker, Mary Beth Doucette, Sarah Rotz, Diana Lewis, Hannah Tait Neufeld, Heather Castleden
Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management, 2021, pp. 636-657

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APA   Click to copy
Walker, C., Doucette, M. B., Rotz, S., Lewis, D., Neufeld, H. T., & Castleden, H. (2021). Non-Indigenous partner perspectives on Indigenous peoples' involvement in renewable energy: exploring reconciliation as relationships of accountability or status quo innocence? Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management, 636–657.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Walker, Chad, Mary Beth Doucette, Sarah Rotz, Diana Lewis, Hannah Tait Neufeld, and Heather Castleden. “Non-Indigenous Partner Perspectives on Indigenous Peoples' Involvement in Renewable Energy: Exploring Reconciliation as Relationships of Accountability or Status Quo Innocence?” Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management (2021): 636–657.


MLA   Click to copy
Walker, Chad, et al. “Non-Indigenous Partner Perspectives on Indigenous Peoples' Involvement in Renewable Energy: Exploring Reconciliation as Relationships of Accountability or Status Quo Innocence?” Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management, 2021, pp. 636–57.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{chad2021a,
  title = {Non-Indigenous partner perspectives on Indigenous peoples' involvement in renewable energy: exploring reconciliation as relationships of accountability or status quo innocence?},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management},
  pages = {636-657},
  author = {Walker, Chad and Doucette, Mary Beth and Rotz, Sarah and Lewis, Diana and Neufeld, Hannah Tait and Castleden, Heather}
}

Purpose
This research considers the potential for renewable energy partnerships to contribute to Canada's efforts to overcome its colonial past and present by developing an understanding of how non-Indigenous peoples working in the sector relate to their Indigenous partners.
Design/methodology/approach
This study is part of a larger research program focused on decolonization and reconciliation in the renewable energy sector. This exploratory research is framed by energy justice and decolonial reconciliation literatures relevant to the topic of Indigenous-led renewable energy. The authors used content and discourse analysis to identify themes arising from 10 semi-structured interviews with non-Indigenous corporate and governmental partners.
Findings
Interviewees’ lack of prior exposure to Indigenous histories, cultures and acknowledgement of settler colonialism had a profound impact on their engagement with reconciliation frameworks. Partners' perspectives on what it means to partner with Indigenous peoples varied; most dismissed the need to further develop understandings of reconciliation and instead focused on increasing community capacity to allow Indigenous groups to participate in the renewable energy transition.
Research limitations/implications
In this study, the authors intentionally spoke with non-Indigenous peoples working in the renewable energy sector. Recruitment was a challenge and the sample is small. The authors encourage researchers to extend their questions to other organizations in the renewable energy sector, across industries and with Indigenous peoples given this is an under-researched field.
Originality/value
This paper is an early look at the way non-Indigenous “partners” working in renewable energy understand and relate to topics of reconciliation, Indigenous rights and self-determination. It highlights potential barriers to reconciliation that are naïvely occurring at organizational and institutional levels, while anchored in colonial power structures. 

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