What is Blue Sky Research Lab?

Blue Sky Research Lab brings together Indigenous and non-Indigenous students, scholars, and community members in research that is relational, place-based, and accountable. Led by Nêhiyaw scholar Dr. Paulina Johnson, the lab is based at the University of Alberta and works with Indigenous communities and collaborators across shared learning spaces.

Our work supports Indigenous futures by making knowledge accessible, strengthening relationships, and contributing to community-led decolonization. We understand research as something living: grounded in responsibility, carried by story, and shaped with people rather than extracted from them.

Blue Sky Research Lab team group photo

Led by Dr. Paulina Johnson

Dr. Paulina Johnson, Sipihkokisikowiskwêw, Blue Sky Woman, is Nêhiyaw and Four-Spirit or Plains Cree, and a citizen of Nipisihkopahk, Samson Cree Nation in Maskwacis, Alberta. Her leadership grounds the lab in Indigenous Knowledge systems, relational accountability, and community-connected scholarship.

She carries forward teachings held across family, land, research, and Ceremony, while braiding Indigenous and Western Knowledge systems through teaching, writing, and collaboration. The lab’s direction grows from that grounding.

Portrait of Dr. Paulina Johnson
Community landscape connected to Blue Sky Research Lab

Rooted in community

Community partners are the roots of our research. Their land-based knowledge, skills, priorities, and relationships anchor our work to place and give it life. As we learn together, we challenge neat boundaries between researcher and participant, theory and story, science and spirit.

Placed in Ceremony

Our research has no simple beginning or end. Ceremony helps us become attentive to the intentions of ancestors, lands, and generations to come. It moves our work beyond linear timelines and toward accountability to all our relations.

Ceremony image connected to Blue Sky Research Lab

Our Research Team

Blue Sky Research Lab is supported by people working across research, teaching, facilitation, and community-connected practice.

Community Collaborators

Our collaborators help shape the lab’s relationships, direction, and responsibilities. Their presence keeps this work accountable to family, community, and the lived contexts that give the research meaning.

Luci Johnson

Luci Johnson

Chris Johnson

Chris Johnson

Kim Bruno

Kim Bruno