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A Culturally Humble Approach to Designing a Sports-Based Youth Development Program With African-Australian Community

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-28, 12:32 authored by Rachel Goff, Patrick O’Keeffe, Abraham Padiet KuolAbraham Padiet Kuol, Rob Cunningham, Ronnie Egan, Bawa Kuyini, Robyn Martin
This article draws on the concept of cultural humility, to describe and analyze a decolonizing approach to co-designing a primary prevention basketball program for young African-Australian people in Melbourne, Australia. We explore the potential for genuine collaboration and power-sharing with a culturally diverse community through collaboratively developing the co-design process and resultant program design. This article highlights the central role of UBUNTU in the co-design process, prioritizing African ways of knowing, being, and doing within a Westernized social work and design context. Through reporting on the stages of program design, we offer an example of how Indigenous knowledges and philosophies such as UBUNTU might be incorporated into co-design through cultural humility. We suggest this allows for a transformation of design tools and processes in ways that undermine oppressive and marginalizing power imbalances in design and social work.

History

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Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Qualitative Health Research

Volume

34

Pagination

1203-1215

ISSN

1049-7323

eISSN

1552-7557

Issue

12

Publisher

SAGE Publications