期刊论文详细信息
Ecology and Society: a journal of integrative science for resilience and sustainability
Applying community-based and Indigenous research methodologies: lessons learned from the Nuxalk Sputc Project
article
Rachelle Beveridge1  Megan F. Moody3  Bernie Pauly4  Grant Murray5  Chris T. Darimont6 
[1] University of Victoria;University of British Columbia;Nuxalk fisheries biologist;Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research, School of Nursing, University of Victoria;Duke University Marine Lab, Duke University;Department of Geography, University of Victoria;Raincoast Conservation Foundation
关键词: community-based participatory research (CBPR);    environmental management;    eulachon;    Indigenous methodologies;    Nuxalk;    research methods;    social-ecological systems;   
DOI  :  10.5751/ES-12702-260421
学科分类:生物科学(综合)
来源: Resilience Alliance Publications
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【 摘 要 】

In the face of ecological depletion on a global scale, Indigenous knowledges, priorities, and perspectives are increasingly applied in community and academic research intended to inform social-ecological decision making. Many academic researchers and decision makers have learned to solicit Indigenous knowledges using community-based research methods and participatory processes. However, Indigenous scholars and leaders are increasingly moving beyond these standard practices to apply Indigenous methodologies, engaging local epistemologies, and culturally relevant methods to produce respectful research outcomes in support of local priorities. We share experiences and learning from the Nuxalk Sputc (eulachon) Project to illustrate how an Indigenous research process was developed and applied by the Nuxalk Nation’s Stewardship Office in Bella Coola, British Columbia (Nuxalk territory). This project documented, interpreted, articulated, and represented Nuxalk knowledge about eulachon (Thaleichthys pacificus) using an iterative, community-driven process informed by Nuxalk protocols and knowledge systems. We begin by detailing the project process, including project initiation, decision making, and community engagement processes, and methods of knowledge documentation, interpretation, articulation, representation, and sharing. Demonstrating that the Sputc Project’s distinctly Nuxalk approach was key to its success, we discuss how engaging Nuxalk knowledges influenced our process from conception to completion, resulting in an emergent methodology that prioritized relational accountability, locally grounded methods of knowledge documentation and interpretation, respectful representation, and reflexivity. Based on our experience with the Sputc Project, we distinguish between Indigenous and community-based methodologies, both in terms of their epistemological foundations and their orientation to the goals of decolonization and resurgence. We suggest that by considering and valuing Indigenous methodologies, researchers and decision makers can move toward authentically and respectfully engaging Indigenous knowledge and priorities, and ultimately, toward supporting Indigenous production, interpretation, articulation, and representation of knowledge in a contemporary context.

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