Partnering on the Evaluation of the Montana Tribal Tobacco Program: The Story of a Successful State-Tribal Collaboration

American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities have historically been subject to unethical research and evaluation practices imposed upon them by outsiders. Given this history and the often, strained relationships between state and tribal governments, tribes can be hesitant to work with and t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Janet Sucha, Erica Roberts, Brandie Buckless, Lisa Richidt, Diana Bigby, Dana Kingfisher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Specialty Publications 2021-07-01
Series:Journal of Participatory Research Methods
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.35844/001c.25446
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850255559443349504
author Janet Sucha
Erica Roberts
Brandie Buckless
Lisa Richidt
Diana Bigby
Dana Kingfisher
author_facet Janet Sucha
Erica Roberts
Brandie Buckless
Lisa Richidt
Diana Bigby
Dana Kingfisher
author_sort Janet Sucha
collection DOAJ
description American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities have historically been subject to unethical research and evaluation practices imposed upon them by outsiders. Given this history and the often, strained relationships between state and tribal governments, tribes can be hesitant to work with and trust state agencies to conduct research and evaluation in their communities. This paper shares a collaborative process undertaken by the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, American Indian Tobacco Prevention Specialists, and James Bell Associates, Inc., to successfully develop and implement a locally meaningful evaluation project. Together, we designed a culturally responsive evaluation study to examine the impact of the Montana Tobacco Use Prevention Program being implemented in tribal and urban Indian communities. We co-authored this paper to ensure the perspectives of all three groups were represented. We share lessons learned and recommendations for state agencies, tribes, and urban Indian organizations seeking to evaluate tribal public health programs.
format Article
id doaj-art-4482001be7c742b79e43da2d8a5a9fa1
institution OA Journals
issn 2688-0261
language English
publishDate 2021-07-01
publisher Specialty Publications
record_format Article
series Journal of Participatory Research Methods
spelling doaj-art-4482001be7c742b79e43da2d8a5a9fa12025-08-20T01:56:52ZengSpecialty PublicationsJournal of Participatory Research Methods2688-02612021-07-012210.35844/001c.25446Partnering on the Evaluation of the Montana Tribal Tobacco Program: The Story of a Successful State-Tribal CollaborationJanet SuchaErica RobertsBrandie BucklessLisa RichidtDiana BigbyDana KingfisherAmerican Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities have historically been subject to unethical research and evaluation practices imposed upon them by outsiders. Given this history and the often, strained relationships between state and tribal governments, tribes can be hesitant to work with and trust state agencies to conduct research and evaluation in their communities. This paper shares a collaborative process undertaken by the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, American Indian Tobacco Prevention Specialists, and James Bell Associates, Inc., to successfully develop and implement a locally meaningful evaluation project. Together, we designed a culturally responsive evaluation study to examine the impact of the Montana Tobacco Use Prevention Program being implemented in tribal and urban Indian communities. We co-authored this paper to ensure the perspectives of all three groups were represented. We share lessons learned and recommendations for state agencies, tribes, and urban Indian organizations seeking to evaluate tribal public health programs.https://doi.org/10.35844/001c.25446
spellingShingle Janet Sucha
Erica Roberts
Brandie Buckless
Lisa Richidt
Diana Bigby
Dana Kingfisher
Partnering on the Evaluation of the Montana Tribal Tobacco Program: The Story of a Successful State-Tribal Collaboration
Journal of Participatory Research Methods
title Partnering on the Evaluation of the Montana Tribal Tobacco Program: The Story of a Successful State-Tribal Collaboration
title_full Partnering on the Evaluation of the Montana Tribal Tobacco Program: The Story of a Successful State-Tribal Collaboration
title_fullStr Partnering on the Evaluation of the Montana Tribal Tobacco Program: The Story of a Successful State-Tribal Collaboration
title_full_unstemmed Partnering on the Evaluation of the Montana Tribal Tobacco Program: The Story of a Successful State-Tribal Collaboration
title_short Partnering on the Evaluation of the Montana Tribal Tobacco Program: The Story of a Successful State-Tribal Collaboration
title_sort partnering on the evaluation of the montana tribal tobacco program the story of a successful state tribal collaboration
url https://doi.org/10.35844/001c.25446
work_keys_str_mv AT janetsucha partneringontheevaluationofthemontanatribaltobaccoprogramthestoryofasuccessfulstatetribalcollaboration
AT ericaroberts partneringontheevaluationofthemontanatribaltobaccoprogramthestoryofasuccessfulstatetribalcollaboration
AT brandiebuckless partneringontheevaluationofthemontanatribaltobaccoprogramthestoryofasuccessfulstatetribalcollaboration
AT lisarichidt partneringontheevaluationofthemontanatribaltobaccoprogramthestoryofasuccessfulstatetribalcollaboration
AT dianabigby partneringontheevaluationofthemontanatribaltobaccoprogramthestoryofasuccessfulstatetribalcollaboration
AT danakingfisher partneringontheevaluationofthemontanatribaltobaccoprogramthestoryofasuccessfulstatetribalcollaboration