Regions: Inuvialuit Settlement Region, Gwich'in Settlement Area, Sahtu Settlement Area, Dehcho Region, North Slave Region, South Slave Region
Tags: physical sciences, water quality, social sciences, governance, traditional knowledge, community based monitoring
Principal Investigator: | Bakker, Karen (2) |
Licence Number: | 16278 |
Organization: | University of British Columbia |
Licensed Year(s): |
2018
2017
|
Issued: | Apr 12, 2018 |
Objective(s): To enhance effective, equitable Indigenous co-governance of water resources.
Project Description: The goal is to enhance effective, equitable Indigenous co-governance of water resources through pursuing five objectives: 1)Critically conceptualize the potential for reciprocal coordination of, and complementarity between, evolving common ("Western") and Indigenous water law and governance frameworks; 2)Develop innovative methods for co-researching Indigenous Water Governance, based on collaborative principles such as "Two-Eyed Seeing"; 3)Support improved water governance by developing and implementing a community Environmental Monitoring and Information System (EMIS), pilot-tested with Indigenous communities across Western and Northern Canada; 4)Create innovative legal, regulatory and policy tools and associated strategies for enhancing Indigenous community engagement in water governance; and, 5) Disseminate our findings in an innovative fashion, using a broad range of multi-media tools (video, digital media, photography, briefing notes, interactive website) in multiple languages (English, French, and Dene) accessible to diverse audiences. The primary research methods will be: Semi-structured Interviews/Focus Group, Survey Research methods, and participatory research (including auto ethnography and participant observation). The research team will also be piloting water monitoring tools and techniques. This will include using water monitoring tools to assess turbidity and ph testing. The team will be conducting this research at various locations as the community partnerships develop over time. The research will begin with trips to Dechinta Centre for Research and Learning, and out-trips along the Peel, the Horton and the Dehcho rivers. Research collaborations will proceed with the understanding that a community may engage nominally or choose to disengage from the research project. Should it be deemed appropriate other community partnerships will be established to widen the scope of research. The research team will be observing respect for persons and communities through securing free, informed and ongoing consent with the participants. The team recognize that codes of research practice go beyond the scope of ethical protections for individual participants, and extend to the interconnection between humans and the natural world, and include obligations to maintain, and pass on to future generations, knowledge received from ancestors as well as innovations devised in the present generation. In recognition of this, the research process will include ongoing consultation with partner communities and individuals. Two of the goals include: creating innovative legal, regulatory and policy tools and associated strategies for enhancing Indigenous community engagement in water governance, as well as disseminating the findings in an innovative fashion, using a broad range of multi-media tools (video, digital media, photography, briefing notes, interactive website) in multiple languages (English, French, and Dene) accessible to diverse audiences. The research team will determine the provisions for determining intellectual property rights with the research advisory council prior to any research taking place. Specific agreements pertaining to intellectual property will be determined in collaboration and consultation with each research community. The fieldwork for this study will be conducted from April 12, 2018 to December 31, 2018.