黑料吃瓜不打烊

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Joey-Lynn Wabie

Joey-Lynn Wabie

Associate Professor, School of Indigenous Relations
School of Indigenous Relations
Faculty of Education and Health

Biography

Joey-Lynn Wabie is an Algonquin Anicinabe ikwe from Mahingan Sagahigan (Wolf Lake) First Nation in Quebec. She is an associate professor in Indigenous Social Work at 黑料吃瓜不打烊 located on Atikameksheng Anishnawbek territory (Sudbury, Ontario). Joey-Lynn works in community at the grassroots level focusing on wellness, culture, and bringing people together. Her research interests are Indigenous youth's perspectives on Truth & Reconciliation, spiritual wellness/healing, and land-based teaching/learning.

Joey-Lynn takes the role of sister, auntie, cousin seriously and is dedicated to ensuring her culture and traditions are passed on through storytelling, ceremony, and the occasional latte.

Education

2017 PhD School of Rural and Northern Health, 黑料吃瓜不打烊

2011 MSW School of Social Work, 黑料吃瓜不打烊

2005 BSW School of Indigenous Relations, 黑料吃瓜不打烊

Academic Appointments

2023 Associate Professor, School of Indigenous Relations

2021 Acting Director, Maamwizing Indigenous Research Institute

2020 Associate Director, Maamwizing Indigenous Research Institute

2018 Academic Director, YouthREX, Indigenous Initiatives

2017 Assistant Professor, School of Indigenous Relations

Research

2022? Principal Investigator, SSHRC, Maamwizing: A hub for community-driven Indigenous research, $430,832.00.

2022? Co-investigator, University of Toronto’s Edwin S.H. Leong Centre for Healthy Children, Waaneziyenhwiininoodjimoowayin (The path that is taken to heal together):? Indigenous parents’ stories of the Child Welfare System, $80,100.00.

2021? Principal Investigator, YouthREX, Transform Nations, $4900.00. Completed.

2020? Principal Investigator, Canadian Heritage Fund, Tabik-Gizis Kinamegewin (Moon Teachings), $38,000 & Health Data Research Network, $5000.

2019? Principal investigator, SSHRC Connections Grant. Oshkimadizijik inewin: youth voices on reconciliation, $23,976. Completed.

2019? Co-applicant, New Frontiers in Research Fund, azhen giinawaa mazinibii'iganan, Repatriating Children’s Artwork to Indian Residential School and Day School Survivors in Anishinabe and Algonquin Territory, $246,692. Completed.

2018? Principal investigator, Advancing Indigenous Research Fund, Visioning with grassroots groups, $5,000. Completed.

2018? Principal investigator, Indigenous Mentorship Network Program, CIHR, Anishnabe Odinewin Summer Camp, 5,000. ?Completed.?

2018? Principal investigator, 黑料吃瓜不打烊 Research Fund, Land-based Learning Journey, $5,000. Completed.

2018? Co-investigator, CIHR, Towards a Foundation for Indigenous Health Research Grounded in Our Relationships: NEIHR Development Grant, $70,000. Completed.

2009? Recipient of the University of Toronto/McMaster University Indigenous Health Research Development Program Graduate Scholarship and Research Support, funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research-Institute of Aboriginal People's Health, $15,000.

Awards

2020? Top Research and Innovation Achievement, 5th place, Oshkimadizijik inewin: youth voices on reconciliation, Research Week, 黑料吃瓜不打烊.

2020? Top Research and Innovation Achievement, 7th place, Wiigwam, Research Week, 黑料吃瓜不打烊.

2019? Top Research and Innovation Achievement, 3rd place, Drs. Jennifer Walker (co-PI), Taima Moeke-Pickering, Sheila Cote-Meek, Joey-Lynn Wabie and Celeste Pedri-Spade were part of the research team behind the inaugural summer school of Ontario's Indigenous Mentorship Network (IMN), Ontario's first Indigenous-led health research training network.

Publications

Wabie, J., Watkins, T., Leslie, S., Anderson, M., Chartrand, A., & Haramincic, A. (2023). All our relations: Stories from the classroom and the land. In S. Cote-Meek & T. Moeke-Pickering (Eds), Perspectives on Indigenous Pedagogy in Education: Learning From One Another. IGI Global.

Wabie, J., & Kennedy, M. (2023). Navigating nikinaagiinaa (all our relations) online. In V. Kannen & A. Langille (Eds), Virtual Identities and Digital Culture. Taylor & Francis.

Wabie, J. (2021). Rites of passage: Building strength and resilience. In M. Hankard, & J. Dillen (Eds), Red dresses on bare trees: Stories and reflections on Indigenous murdered and missing women and girls. JCharlton Publishing: British Columbia.

Wabie, J., London, T., Pegahmagabow, J. (2020). Land-based learning journey. Journal of Indigenous Social Development,10 (1), 50-80.

Wabie, J. (2019). Kijiikwewin aji:sweetgrass stories with traditional Algonquin and Ojibwe women in northern Ontario. International Journal of Indigenous Health, 14 (2), 54-73.

Morgan, L., & Wabie, J. (2012). Aboriginal Women’s Access and Acceptance of Reproductive Health Care. Pimatisiwin, 10(3), 313-325.