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In this onePERspective episode of asPERusual, doctoral trainee Sasha Kullman reflects on key take aways from Season 3, Episode 6 of asPERusual, which featured guests Sunday Queskekapow and Brianna Hunt. Sasha emphasizes why framing research around “sensitive topics” — rather than deficit-based terms like “vulnerable” or “marginalized” — shifts power and narrative back to communities. She highlights the ethical imperative of including peer researchers with lived experience, the importance of pre-research relationship building, and the responsibility of academic teams to support peer researchers emotionally, materially, and culturally. The central takeaway: ethical, justice-oriented research requires humility, reciprocity, and creating safe, supportive spaces for both participants and peer researchers.
By Anna Chudyk, Bryn Robinson and Roger StoddardIn this onePERspective episode of asPERusual, doctoral trainee Sasha Kullman reflects on key take aways from Season 3, Episode 6 of asPERusual, which featured guests Sunday Queskekapow and Brianna Hunt. Sasha emphasizes why framing research around “sensitive topics” — rather than deficit-based terms like “vulnerable” or “marginalized” — shifts power and narrative back to communities. She highlights the ethical imperative of including peer researchers with lived experience, the importance of pre-research relationship building, and the responsibility of academic teams to support peer researchers emotionally, materially, and culturally. The central takeaway: ethical, justice-oriented research requires humility, reciprocity, and creating safe, supportive spaces for both participants and peer researchers.