“…Moreover, through this extractive process, researchers run the risk of losing the context, values and struggles of the people and communities that they are researching (Gaudry, 2011) and perpetuating false assumptions which obfuscates indigenous realities and experiences (Shah, Carey, Harris, DeWilde, & Cook, 2013). It is, therefore, a very positive development that indigenous communities have steadily taken such knowledge recovery into their own hands as a form of empowerment, developing their own indigenous methodologies that go beyond the objective paradigm of Western research methods in order to produce research that benefits their own communities (Houston, 2007;Kovach, Carriere, Barrett, Montgomery, & Gillies, 2013;Lyons, 2011;McGregor, 2004;Morgensen, 2012;Wilson, 2004). At the same time, non-indigenous scholars are also being encouraged, despite the 'potential fraughtness of the pursuit' (Felt & Natcher, 2011), to conduct indigenous research, albeit within the auspices of indigenous methodologies (Harvey, 2003;Kovach et al, 2013;Weber-Pillwax, 1999) and self-reflexivity (Krauss & Turpin, 2013).…”