Healing through Photography – A reflection on the Brightening Our Home Fires Project in the remote hamlet of Ulukhaktok, Northwest Territories[Record]

  • Annie Goose and
  • Dorothy Badry

…more information

  • Annie Goose
    Community Liaison, Translator, Project Participant, Ulukhaktok, Northwest Territories

  • Dorothy Badry
    PhD, RSW, Faculty of Social Work, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
    badry@ucalgary.ca

Authors’ Note

This paper is part of the Brightening Our Home Fires project. It is the third in a series of three articles in this journal: 1) An Examination of Three Key Factors Alcohol, Trauma and Child Welfare: Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and the Northwest Territories of Canada, Brightening Our Home Fires; 2) An Exploratory Study on the Use of Photovoice as a Method for Approaching FASD Prevention in the Northwest Territories; and 3) Healing through Photography – A Reflection on the Brightening Our Home Fires Project in the Remote Hamlet of Ulukhaktok, Northwest Territories. Together these three articles provide a comprehensive introduction and overview of this project that took place in the NT from 2011-2012. These are the first publications on this research. This project received funding from the First Nations and Inuit Health Branch, ethics approval from the Conjoint Faculties Research Ethics Board at the University of Calgary and a research license from the Aurora Research Institute after a process of community consultation with different communities engaged in this project. These papers are of interest to researchers, practitioners and educators in the north. Names and images are used with permission of the individuals. All the images in this article were taken by Annie Goose. Special thanks to Laverna Klengenberg for her identification of this project as Healing through Photography, a title that truly resonates with the work of the Brightening Our Home Fires Project.