Community Collaborators

Relationships that root the work in community.

Blue Sky Research Lab’s work is shaped by collaboration with community members, knowledge keepers, family, and partners whose relationships, priorities, and lived experience give the work meaning. These collaborations are not secondary to research. They are central to how the work is carried.

Why Collaboration Matters

Community collaboration helps ensure that research remains accountable, grounded, and responsive to the people and places it touches. It brings lived experience, cultural knowledge, family relationship, and community direction into the work in ways that challenge extractive or distant research models.

These relationships shape what is asked, what is shared, how knowledge moves, and what responsibilities accompany the work. They are part of the ongoing practice of carrying research in a good way.

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Community Collaborators

Luci Johnson

Luci Johnson

Community Collaborator

Chris Johnson

Chris Johnson

Community Collaborator

Kim Bruno

Kim Bruno

Community Collaborator

Carrying the Work Together

Community collaboration is not simply advisory. It is part of the living structure of the work. These relationships help the lab remain grounded in accountability, relationality, and the realities of community life beyond the university.

As projects develop, collaborators shape direction, context, and meaning in ways that strengthen both the process and the public-facing outcomes of research.

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Related Pages

Explore the broader network of people, relationships, and projects that shape Blue Sky Research Lab.