Knowledge Connects Our Hearts and Lands: A Qualitative Research Study on Stewarding Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledges for Community Well-Being
Abstract
1. Introduction
Positionality
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Questions
2.2. Overall Study Design
2.3. Setting
2.4. Recruitment and Consent
2.5. Interview and Focus Group Data Collection
2.6. Data Analysis
3. Results
| Theme | Subtheme |
|---|---|
| Historical and current barriers impact the sharing of TEK among our People | |
| Our TEK reveals changes to our Lands over time | |
| Preserving our language is necessary for intergenerational transmission of our TEK | -Sharing our TEK is needed in more community spaces -There is an urgency to learn traditional knowledge from Elders |
| Protecting our Lands and medicines is vital to our health and well-being | -Protecting Land through TEK |
| We must take the time to learn our TEK for future generations | -Importance of cultural protocols -TEK is collectively grounded in spirituality and promotes community wellness |
| We need to protect our TEK just as our ancestors did | -Community-level capacity and infrastructure challenges for physical repository protection |
3.1. Historical and Current Barriers Impact the Sharing of TEK Among Our People
[T]he main teachers were…the Elders, the Grandma and Grandpa. They [the government] took them away from them. Put them in school. That’s where we lost; that’s what was planned to begin with, 150 years ago.(US010)
[T]he barriers kind of goes all the way back to our historical trauma and…what happened at boarding schools and what was done there to our people to rid them of the language, their traditional knowledge, their family conception, things like that.(US009)
Like for instance, computers. It is something not from us…but they are happy and learning from it. Even though it may be good, [but] in a way it is hurting…our children.(US005)
So now it is “no, do not drink, do not run around at night” is what would be said. Now, no one listens to that anymore. All you hear is “I know”.(US006)
If they really want to know the old ways, you know, they need to sit down and listen to you.(US001)
3.2. Our TEK Reveals Changes to Our Lands over Time
Well, look at the weather now. It’s what, December. We used to have about a foot or two feet of snow already. It’s still summer here.(US001)
Elders said years ago, this was never an issue. It was never a problem. You look at the river, it’s high. We’re good. Just keep going. But now it’s like, what are we going to do when this river dries up.(US004)
Those are indications that those areas used to contain a lot of water, and now they don’t. So with…climate change, just our very place names that were in [Indigenous language] could tell you already that there has been an effect on the land based on how they used to name…the land.(US009)
3.3. Preserving Our Language Is Necessary for Intergenerational Transmission of Our TEK
So that was one barrier that he ran into because he didn’t know how to speak the language, but he learned it.(US003)
When I was growing up, I had always heard the [Indigenous language] being spoken to me, and I did not understand English when I was growing up.(US005)
Preserve the language because everything is tied to it.(US004)
So, if you’re trying to pass on the knowledge like that and you don’t speak the language and stuff, then you can’t learn it because you can’t understand it.(US003)
I always tell them I don’t know everything, but this is what little I know from my grandparents, you know. And I hope you listen to me and I hope you…learn it…You won’t be ridiculed. You know, you’re here to learn. If you want to learn, that’s all you need.(US004)
So, we all gather at the [traditional home structure], and that’s where Grandma and Grandpa, you know, and, um, they tell you stories that they go, you go by and…now I guess it’s when they have [ceremony] where they socialize, but not as…important like in the past.(US008)
And she passed away, and it was never passed on to anybody else. So when she passed away, it stopped there.(US003)
3.4. Protecting Our Lands and Medicines Is Vital to Our Health and Well-Being
Mother nature gives it to us free, for us to use…we can’t misuse our environments or…ecological stuff that was given to us to cure us, to help us.(US001)
And…they have to understand that in the future, they’re the ones who are going to have to deal with a lot of the bad things that the past has…neglected. So today, we have to make a difference within yourselves and truly understand the importance of our land and the changes.(US009)
They say that if you take care of the land, the land will take care of you.(US008)
Everything changed…when we got invaded, the whole ecological system started to change. Our knowledge, our teaching[s], w[ere]n’t there anymore, and they put us in school.(US010)
3.5. We Must Take the Time to Learn Our TEK for Future Generations
Everything has to start at home to where we teach our families, our relatives of how to protect our land, and many things that were taught to us by our Elders that were here before us.(US001)
There used to be a lot of praying people out there, and a lot of things will come out good.(US008)
Believe in what you do, what you see, what you give, and what you respect. That’s…what knowledge is all about.(US001)
3.6. We Need to Protect Our TEK Just as Our Ancestors Did
And you can tell who really needs it. You can tell who wants it in a good way.(US010)
I think that would be something…that should still be written down. And you take care of it. Put it in a fireproof case or something.(US001)
Making a toolbox that would be for our people to have there always. Because, a lot of our people who have a lot of knowledge aren’t here anymore.(US009)
3.7. Stewardship of Our Land Is Our Responsibility
The Elderly back then would run things good. For us…recently it is like that, the ones that are coming after us, it would be good if they can preserve it.(US011)
3.8. Teaching Language and TEK in Different Settings Is Key
3.9. Social Changes Can Hinder Our Younger Generations from Learning TEK
Like they are saying, we are handing it over to you, and now you need to carry it. Now it is like it was handed to us. It is good that we are talking about it.(US011)
3.10. Infrastructure and Physical Protection of TEK Concerns
4. Discussion
Limitations and Strengths
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Theme | Subtheme |
|---|---|
| Stewardship of our Land is our responsibility | -Community and family access to TEK is key -Spirituality is vital to protecting our land |
| Teaching language and TEK in different settings is key | |
| Social changes can hinder our younger generations from learning TEK | -Changes affecting knowledge uptake can lead to health concerns |
| Infrastructure and physical protection of TEK are concerns |
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Carroll, D.; Edwards, D.J.; Riley, R.; Redvers, N. Knowledge Connects Our Hearts and Lands: A Qualitative Research Study on Stewarding Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledges for Community Well-Being. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22, 1573. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101573
Carroll D, Edwards DJ, Riley R, Redvers N. Knowledge Connects Our Hearts and Lands: A Qualitative Research Study on Stewarding Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledges for Community Well-Being. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2025; 22(10):1573. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101573
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarroll, Danya, Desiree J. Edwards, Ramon Riley, and Nicole Redvers. 2025. "Knowledge Connects Our Hearts and Lands: A Qualitative Research Study on Stewarding Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledges for Community Well-Being" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 22, no. 10: 1573. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101573
APA StyleCarroll, D., Edwards, D. J., Riley, R., & Redvers, N. (2025). Knowledge Connects Our Hearts and Lands: A Qualitative Research Study on Stewarding Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledges for Community Well-Being. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 22(10), 1573. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101573

