In a Good Way: Braiding Indigenous and Western Knowledge Systems to Understand and Restore Freshwater Systems
Abstract
:1. Introduction
How are Indigenous and Western knowledge systems being brought together to better understand, manage, and restore freshwater social–ecological systems within parts of Turtle Island (colonially known as Canada and the United States) in a good way?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Scoping Review
2.2. Search Strategy
- Indigenous knowledges: Indigenous OR Aboriginal OR Inuit OR Metis OR First Nation OR Native American OR Indian OR First Peoples OR tribe OR tribal AND knowledge OR ways of knowing OR perspectives OR values OR science OR systems OR traditional ecological knowledge OR traditional knowledge OR cultural knowledge;
- Aquatic system: lake OR river OR stream OR wetland OR freshwater OR watershed OR basin OR catchment OR water resource OR aquatic OR inland water;
- Study applications or project outcomes: restoration OR management OR decision OR planning OR dam operation OR river regulation OR environmental flows OR ecological flows OR water allocation OR impact assessment OR environmental assessment OR risk assessment OR resilience OR adaptation;
- Geography: Canada OR United States OR North America OR Turtle Island.
2.3. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.4. Screening
2.5. Novel Frameworks
- Equity: Valuing different knowledge systems by staying humble, remaining open to different ways of knowing, and challenging colonial hierarchies that celebrate Western teachings while questioning Indigenous ones;
- Access: Respecting data sovereignty of Indigenous collaborators, including cultural and intellectual property;
- Usability: Prioritizing project outcomes that benefit Indigenous collaborators and being responsive to community needs;
- eXchange: Maintaining ongoing communication between project partners with continuous and prior-informed consent and relationship building.
2.6. Data Extraction
3. Results
3.1. Included Records
3.2. Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Records
3.3. Freshwater Topics and Applications
3.4. How the EAUX Principles Are Enacted
3.5. How Knowledge Systems Are Braided in the A-to-A Framework
Meaning | What It Might Look Like | Examples from the Review | |
---|---|---|---|
Equity | Honour Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination. | Learning about Indigenous partners’ history and cosmology |
|
Seeking to disrupt power imbalances |
| ||
Co-developing objectives, methods, and protocols |
| ||
Acknowledging Indigenous sovereignty and rights |
| ||
Regard IKS and WKS as equally valid and distinct. | Respecting and valuing IKS |
| |
Using the Indigenous partner’s language |
| ||
Compensating Indigenous research partners |
| ||
Recognizing the intellectual contributions of Indigenous partners |
| ||
Respect all worldviews. | Respecting (and engaging in, if invited) cultural activities |
| |
Valuing other-than-humans | |||
Access | Support Indigenous data sovereignty. | Using formal instruments for data management |
|
Co-developing a plan for managing data |
| ||
Respecting Indigenous partners’ decisions regarding what can/cannot be shared |
| ||
Usability | Centre Indigenous benefit. | Indigenous-led and -initiated projects motivated by community interests, needs, and priorities. |
|
Prioritizing Indigenous partner’s project goals |
| ||
Being responsive to evolving objectives |
| ||
Prepare project outputs that are accessible to facilitate use. | Considering available infrastructure, resources, and expertise within the community |
| |
Disseminating through more accessible platforms |
| ||
eXchange | Build relationships founded on respect and trust. | Engaging in non-project-related activities |
|
Spend time with community, preferably on the land |
| ||
Establish pathways for open, continuous communication. | Documenting agreements and protocols for how the project will unfold |
| |
Establishing “off-season” communication pathways |
| ||
Engage in reciprocity. | Fairly compensating the contributions of Indigenous Peoples |
| |
Facilitating intergenerational knowledge exchange |
| ||
Sharing knowledge (both IKS and WKS) |
|
What Braiding May Look Like | Examples from the Review | |
---|---|---|
Axiology and ontology | Listening to others and observing |
|
Learning about Indigenous worldviews, values, and history |
| |
Reflecting on one’s axiology and ontology |
| |
Finding commonalities |
| |
Respecting differences |
| |
Epistemology and methodology | Co-creating objectives, methods, and protocols |
|
Framing project methodologies with Indigenous epistemologies |
| |
Indigenizing Western frameworks |
| |
Choosing culturally relevant species and metrics |
| |
Data gathering | Formal knowledge sharing |
|
Knowledge sharing on the land |
| |
Participating in cultural activities |
| |
Learning from other-than-humans |
| |
Indigenous partners using Western methods/technology |
| |
Indigenous partners collecting samples while harvesting/fishing on the land | ||
Analysis and synthesis | Facilitating workshops/sharing circles |
|
Participating in cultural activities |
| |
Sharing knowledge |
| |
Synthesizing knowledge systems using Western tools |
| |
Interpreting WKS using an Indigenous lens |
| |
Collaborating to review/interpret results |
| |
Application | Decision-making and planning |
|
Ceremony |
| |
Informing values and worldviews |
| |
Knowledge sharing |
| |
Different ways to apply braided knowledge systems |
4. Discussion
4.1. “A Transformation of My Mindset” (Inspired by Shaw et al. [73])
“[a]t the superficial level of encounter, the two entities may indeed acknowledge each other but there is a clear lack of substance or depth to the encounter. What remains hidden and enfolded are the deeper level thoughts, interests and assumptions that will inevitably influence and animate the kind of relationship the two can have.”(p. 195)
4.2. “Long-Term Personal Relationships and Trust” (Inspired by Reo et al. [98])
4.3. “The River Is Us” (Inspired by Fox et al. [35])
“For Anishnaabe… rivers are living ancestors that require some help from people to heal damages and illnesses caused by people. By providing care for these ancestors, in part through ceremony, people themselves (or communities) are undergoing their own healing processes by restoring their relationships with rivers. This creates a depth of commitment to restoration that goes well beyond the ecological rationales that generally motivate other river projects.”(p. 528)
4.4. “There Is No Magic Recipe” (Inspired by Gérin-Lajoie et al. [82])
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Inclusion | Exclusion | |
---|---|---|
Spatial and temporal |
|
|
Knowledge systems |
|
|
Aquatic system |
|
|
Record type |
|
|
Record Type | Number of Records | Number of Open Access Records |
---|---|---|
Peer-reviewed journal article | 104 | 63 |
Reports | 17 | 17 |
Graduate thesis or dissertation | 13 | 13 |
Book or book chapter | 3 | 0 |
News article | 1 | 1 |
Approximate Description of Scale | Number of Records |
---|---|
Local | 60 |
Regional | 25 |
Watershed | 29 |
Indigenous territory | 8 |
State/province/territory (colonial boundary) | 3 |
Country (colonial boundary) | 11 |
Turtle Island | 1 |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Mehltretter, S.; Bradford, A.; Longboat, S.; Luby, B. In a Good Way: Braiding Indigenous and Western Knowledge Systems to Understand and Restore Freshwater Systems. Water 2024, 16, 934. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16070934
Mehltretter S, Bradford A, Longboat S, Luby B. In a Good Way: Braiding Indigenous and Western Knowledge Systems to Understand and Restore Freshwater Systems. Water. 2024; 16(7):934. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16070934
Chicago/Turabian StyleMehltretter, Samantha, Andrea Bradford, Sheri Longboat, and Brittany Luby. 2024. "In a Good Way: Braiding Indigenous and Western Knowledge Systems to Understand and Restore Freshwater Systems" Water 16, no. 7: 934. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16070934
APA StyleMehltretter, S., Bradford, A., Longboat, S., & Luby, B. (2024). In a Good Way: Braiding Indigenous and Western Knowledge Systems to Understand and Restore Freshwater Systems. Water, 16(7), 934. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16070934