“…In 2011, Two-Eyed Seeing was adopted to guide the vision and mandate of the Canadian Institutes for Health Research and the Institute for Aboriginal Peoples' Health (CIHR, 2015). There has been an increase in the use of Two-Eyed Seeing to guide environmental sciences (Ahmed et al, 2022(Ahmed et al, , 2023Leonard et al, 2022), program development (Dunn et al, 2022;Marsh et al, 2022;Nicholson et al, 2021), education (Acharibasam & McVittie, 2022;Heuckmann & Zeyer, 2022), social justice (Cullen & Castleden, 2022), and discussions for cultural competency (Chatwood et al, 2015;Wright et al, 2019b). Moreover, there remains variation in how Two-Eyed Seeing is applied within the literature.…”