American Indian Law Center (1999). Model tribal research code, with materials for tribal regulation for research and checklist for Indian health boards (3rd ed.). Albuquerque, NM: American Indian Law Center.
2.
BaldwinJ. (1999). Conducting drug abuse prevention research in partnership with Native American communities: Meeting challenges through collaborative approaches. Drugs and Society, 14, 77–92.
3.
BeauvaisF. (1999). Obtaining consent and other ethical issues in the conduct of research in American Indian communities. Drugs and Society, 14, 167–189.
4.
FisherP.A.BallT.J. (2003). Tribal participatory research: Mechanisms of a collaborative model. American Journal of Community Psychology, 32(3–4), 207–216.
5.
FisherP.A.BallT.J. (2002). The Indian family wellness project: An application of the tribal participatory research model. Prevention Science, 3(3), 235–240.
6.
MohattG.V. (1989). The community as informant or collaborator?American Indian & Alaska Native Mental Health Research, 2, 64–70.
7.
MohattG.V. & ThomasL.R. (2006). “I wonder, why would you did it that way?” Ethical dilemmas in doing participatory research with Alaska native communities. (Pp. 93–115) In TrimbleJ., & FisherC. (eds.) The handbook of ethical research with ethnocultural populations and communities. Thousand Oaks: Sage.
8.
MoranJ. (1995). Culturally sensitive alcohol prevention research in ethnic communities. In LangtonP.EpsteinL., & OrlandiM., (Eds.), The challenge of participatory Research: Preventing alcohol-related problems in the ethnic community. (Pp. 43–56). CSAP Cultural Competence Series 3, DHHS Publication No. SMA 95-3042). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
9.
NoeT.MansonS.CroyC.McGoughH.HendersonJ. & BuchwaldD. (2006). In their own voices: American Indian decisions to participate in health research. (Pp. 77–92). In TrimbleJ., & FisherC. (eds.) The handbook of ethical research with ethnocultural populations and communities. Thousand Oaks: Sage.
10.
NortonI.M., & MansonS.M. (1996). Research in American Indian and Alaska Native communities: Navigating the cultural universe of values and process. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 64(5), 856–860.
11.
StubbenJ.D. (2001). Working with and conducting research among American Indian families. American Behavioral Scientist, 44(9), 1466–1481.