This blog crosses different landscapes to pull together themes of Indigenous endurance and development within a context of environmental hazards and injustices.
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Showing posts with label Citizen Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Citizen Science. Show all posts
Monday, February 09, 2015
The Ohlone/Costanoan People, Indian Canyon
I'm heading to San Jose. First Nations there are the Ohlone/Costanoan people. (Many thanks to Melissa Nelson of SFU for this information :) The video above and image below are sourced through their websites and resources.
I'm speaking at the inaugural Citizen Science Conference on Indigenous Peoples and Citizen Science. My theme is to unpack the implications of 'citizenship' on CitSci with the intent to illuminate the struggle of Indigenous Peoples worldwide to be accepted as First Citizens on their own lands. Good science can only come out of good (by which I mean inclusive, ethical) politics...
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Indigenous Peoples as Citizen Scientists
I'm off to the inaugural Citizen Science Conference in San Jose, February 11-12 next year. I'll be delivering a 'speed talk' which entails 5 minutes to deliver the message, a great idea for conferences where it can be hard talk sitting through hour after hour of deliveries...
My 300 seconds will be on the role of Indigenous Peoples in this CitSci space. We hold important knowledge of their
environments. This ancient knowledge is increasingly sought as data for a
variety of scientific disciplines and practices including environmental
management, ecology, ethnobotany, fisheries, forestry, and disaster risk
reduction. Many Indigenous communities are not opposed to working with
scientists and various international conventions have articulated a role for
Indigenous knowledge, particularly traditional ecological knowledge. However,
the history of much ‘collaboration’ has created significant barriers to
progressing truly inclusive Citizen Science in many countries. I'll give a few brief examples from
Aotearoa New Zealand will to show that empowering Indigenous
individuals and collectives as 'Citizen Scientists' will require an acceptance of
possibly radically different worldviews as well as the acknowledgement of
broader issues of justice and ethics.
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