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Research avenues for amplifying Indigenous radio

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-07-14, 10:05 authored by Katie Moylan
In this article, I discuss Indigenous radio’s ongoing importance for tribal communities in the US from my perspective as a settler scholar, drawing on multifaceted research into Indigenous radio’s programme content and production practices before and during the pandemic. For this research, ‘Indigenous radio’ refers to radio produced, managed, presented and/ or owned by tribal communities. Other terms in use to describe Indigenous radio include Native American, Indian, or tribal radio, demonstrating that there is not a single universalising term and reflecting a diversity in tribal cultures, languages and practices more generally. Building on this understanding of the inherent diversity of Indigenous radio, I describe the ways in which my overarching research project investigates Indigenous radio holistically, via critical outputs combining a literature review of Indigenous theoretical approaches, an online interactive map of tribal stations and in-depth case studies of tribal stations. Through these, I explore community-building practices of Indigenous radio as produced through what Indigenous theorists Glen Coulthard and Leanne Betasamosake Simpson (2016) term grounded normativity. Building on this avenue of exploration, I suggest the place-based values embedded in Indigenous radio production practices and content can function as everyday acts of resurgence, following Jeff Corntassel’s (2012) conceptualisation of ways in which Indigenous resurgence can reinforce a project of decolonisation. To exemplify and situate these arguments, I draw on examples of radio production and practitioner insights from selected tribal stations embodying diverse tribal production practices and content, before turning to focus on pandemic practices in Indigenous radio. When the pandemic emerged, my research focus necessarily widened to include and examine COVID-related practices and programming in tribal radio, enabling reflection on these in the context of a paradigm shift in which the value of tribal radio's community-building work has become acute.

Funding

This research was financially supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the grant agreement No [843645](Exploring Tribal Representation across American Indian-produced radio in US Reservation and Urban Contexts [TRR]).

History

Author affiliation

School of Media, Communication and Sociology, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Open Research Europe

Volume

2

Pagination

31

Publisher

Taylor and Francis, F1000Research & European Commission

eissn

2732-5121

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-07-14

Language

en

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