transgender, queer, questioning, intersex and asexual people. The report authors appealed for culturally safe and trauma-informed health, social and justice services based on adherence to the rights of Indigenous Peoples. The Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy (CJOT) is called to action and justice to advance occupational therapy scholarship that benefits the health and well-being of Indigenous Peoples. As a first step, we propose guidelines for writing manuscripts to assist authors and reviewers to critically evaluate how Indigenous Peoples are represented in occupational therapy research published in CJOT. The guidelines build on conventions of high quality and ethical scholarship, and aim to redress historic and current practices of knowledge in the academic literature being translated about Indigenous Peoples, rather than Indigenous Peoples sharing their own knowledge and experiences that honour their communities' protocols and traditions (Younging, 2018).
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