Being in my third year at , I am in the position of having acquired a lot of knowledge in the classroom yet having little opportunity to grapple with this information outside of the academic setting. In the classroom, there is always a detailed set of tasks and steps on what to do next, and while I received copious support from all the amazing people at the Participatory Cultures Lab (PCL), the Lab environment fostered a level of autonomy that while challenging, was explicitly what I searched for and drew me to being a research intern. Furthermore, due to my degree I am no stranger to social studies and how structural barriers around communities often bleed into interpersonal, especially gendered relationships. For this reason, I was especially drawn to the Pathways To Equity internship posting at the PCL, as my academic trajectory, scholarship, and extracurricular work has been dedicated to women focused work and understanding marginalized communities experiences.
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My host organization, Participatory Cultures Lab, is a research lab at university dedicated to utilizing girl-informed, and arts based, participatory research methodologies to help young girls in Canada and abroad tackle gender-based violence in their community. My research focused on Pathways To Equity and More than Words, which focus on young Indigenous boys and men in Canada, and how they are tackling and unlearning toxic masculinity. During the months of May to July, I was tasked with building upon the lab’s approximately 15-page literature review on Healthy Masculinity Programming by and for Indigenous communities in Canada. These programs provide young boys and men, between the ages of 8 - 18, the knowledge and access to resources necessary to address their personal (physical, mental and emotional) health challenges, and develop skills to navigate interpersonal relationships with other men and importantly women. Through this work I was able to see and understand how important it is to consider boys and men and their relationship to the patriarchy when dealing with feminism’s aim of protecting women and the tangible ways that dismantling harmful masculinities in men can better equip them to be partners in women’s lives. By the end of my internship the review was nearly 50 pages long and provided a comprehensive overview of the pillars of healthy masculinity programming, highlighted gaps in the literature on facilitating such programs, and presented a unique framework on facilitation to understand how facilitation can be used for the social benefit and autonomy of Indigenous and other marginalized communities.
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Completing the literature review was the primary highlight of my internship, as it was the culmination of two and a half months of rigorous transcription, research, interviewing a key project partner, and extensive analysis to create a review that was both grounded in existing community endeavors and academic literature on a limited field. Beyond the work I produced, the activities I participated in - the two-day “Transform” event, where researchers from various backgrounds and organizations came together to discuss the work they do, and our intern field trip to the “Echoes of a Proud Nation” Pow Wow at Kahnawake- were inspiring and left a long-lasting impression on me. Transform was enriching because on the second day we hosted a discussion panel with Indigenous Youth from Eskasoni that illuminated the importance of youth spaces, voices, and how to work not just with but for marginalized communities. Subsequently, during our visit to the Pow Wow, I was immersed and enamored by the beautiful cultural rites, practices, dances, community building, and craftsmanship on display.
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