Implementing Indigenous and Western Knowledge Systems (Part 2): “You Have to Take a Backseat” and Abandon the Arrogance of Expertise

Pub Date : 2017-10-11 DOI:10.18584/IIPJ.2017.8.4.8
H. Castleden, Debbie Martin, A. Cunsolo, S. Harper, Catherine Hart, Paul Sylvestre, Robert D. Stefanelli, Lindsay Day, Kaitlin J Lauridsen
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

Despite innovative technological "solutions" to address ongoing water crises in Indigenous communities, significant disparities persist in Canada. Financial investment in infrastructure is necessary, but it is hardly sufficient to address the real problem: entrenched colonialism. One of the greatest challenges in decolonizing research is to prevent that research from reproducing the very categories it is seeking to critique and dismantle. We share findings from thematically-analyzed interviews with academic and community-based researchers who conducted water research with a stated intent to implement Western and Indigenous knowledge systems. Findings revealed that while there is co-learning, ontological and epistemological assumptions carried into these relationships often impede truly integrative practice. Respondents shared how they worked through these persistent barriers of a colonial system.
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实施土著和西方知识体系(下):“你必须后退一步”,放弃对专业知识的傲慢
尽管有创新的技术“解决方案”来解决土著社区持续的水危机,但加拿大仍然存在巨大的差距。对基础设施的财政投资是必要的,但这几乎不足以解决真正的问题:根深蒂固的殖民主义。非殖民化研究的最大挑战之一是防止该研究复制其试图批判和废除的类别。我们分享了对学术和社区研究人员的主题分析访谈结果,这些研究人员进行了水研究,并明确表示有意实施西方和土著知识体系。研究结果表明,虽然存在共同学习,但这些关系中的本体论和认识论假设往往阻碍真正的综合实践。受访者分享了他们是如何克服殖民制度的这些持续障碍的。
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