John Bosco Acharibasam

John Bosco Acharibasam is a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Mount Royal University, Canada. John is a trained community-based researcher with over five years of experience working within remote Indigenous communities both in Canada and Ghana. His research interest includes decolonization, anti-colonial research, Indigenous water governance, climate change, and environmental sustainability issues. As a Black immigrant scholar, John acknowledges the need to build cross-cultural bridges among BIPOC communities in Saskatchewan, Canada. John’s research work has contributed significantly to highlighting some of the environmental and health issues faced by remote Indigenous communities both in Ghana and Saskatchewan, Canada. He is committed to promoting sovereignty and self-determination within remote Indigenous communities.

Publications

Community-Based Participatory Research Design Relevance for Decolonizing Postgraduate Education
John Bosco Acharibasam, Ranjan Datta, Rapahel Ane Atanga, Paul Achonga. © 2024. 11 pages.
The chapter explores the relevance of community-based participatory research design for decolonizing postgraduate programs. The ability of the participatory approach to create...
Decolonization of Postgraduate Education Through Indigenous Two-Eyed Seeing Methodology
John Bosco Acharibasam, Ranjan Datta. © 2024. 15 pages.
This chapter outlines the fundamental principles and practices of the two-eyed seeing methodology and its potential to reshape postgraduate education. It explores the...