ReSearching for the Common Good: Kylan Hinegardner

June 11, 2024

As an interdisciplinary academic institute, the Institute for Social Concerns leverages research to respond to the complex demands of justice and to serve the common good. This series, ReSearching for the Common Good, highlights some of the scholars in our community.

Kylan Hinegardner is a neuroscience and behavior major with a minor in philosophy, science, and mathematics. She is from Greenwood, Indiana, and lives in Ryan Hall. She is a member of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians.

Kylan is a 2023–24 McNeill Common Good Fellow of the Institute for Social Concerns.

What are you researching right now?

Native American and Alaska Native populations have disproportionately high rates of substance use and abuse as compared to other ethnic groups in the United States. I have always been interested in why this is—particularly what social, economic, and political factors are at play in causing it. At Notre Dame, I have narrowed my research question to Native tribes in Washington State and the Midwest. On the suggestion of my advisor, Katherine Comeau, I am also looking at the Māori people of New Zealand. This summer, I am spending eight weeks travelling to these three locations to conduct interviews with medical providers at clinics that specialize in Indigenous health care about what they’ve seen in their patient population regarding substance use and abuse.

How did you become interested in this research?

I am Native American myself, a tribal member of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi located here in the Michiana area. Throughout my life, I have seen both alcohol and substance abuse affect many Native people, from family members, to family-friends, to people I never met but whose stories managed to reach me. When I first became aware that Native Americans suffer from addiction at an extraordinarily high rate, I was confused as to why no one seemed to be addressing this problem. Once I arrived at Notre Dame, I got a pamphlet advertising the McNeill Common Good Fellowship in my residential hall mailbox, and I realized that, through the opportunities this fellowship offers, I could begin to help find a solution to this problem myself through focused research on the root causes and strategies to address them.

What has it meant to be a McNeill Common Good Fellow?

It has meant the world to me to be a part of this fellowship. Through this fellowship, I have earned so much not only about identifying justice issues but also how to go out and do something about it. Over the past two years, the two of them, along with the 14 other members of my cohort, have helped build my confidence and show me that I am capable of creating real, lasting change in the world. Without this program and the assistance it has provided, I would not have been able to do this research that is so important to me personally and academically. I will be forever grateful for the opportunity to have been a part of it.