Johnstone, Kristina2020-07-082020-07-082020-07The purpose of this workshop is to offer a view on how the body and movement function as places of inquiry. We explore the question of “what is ethical?”, and by extension, can an “ethical research method” can be discovered by working with one’s own body in relation to other bodies?https://hdl.handle.net/10539/29202The purpose of this workshop is to offer a view on how the body and movement function as places of inquiry. We explore the question of “what is ethical?”, and by extension, can an “ethical research method” can be discovered by working with one’s own body in relation to other bodies?The purpose of this workshop is to offer a view on how the body and movement function as places of inquiry. We explore the question of “what is ethical?”, and by extension, can an “ethical research method” can be discovered by working with one’s own body in relation to other bodies?enLicensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) licence. Copyright of texts: the authors, performers, and panellists Copyright of images: the authors, artists, performers, and panellistsartistic research, arts research, decolonisation, arts pedagogy,Movement Improvisation and Real-time Composition as a way to Discover Decolonial Ethical Research MethodsArticle