Inuit place-based knowledge, cocreation, and decolonizing processes in the climate research of Lene Kielsen Holm:A conversation with Suzy Basile and Mark Nuttall

This article is a conversation piece in memoriam of Kalaaleq researcher and scientist Lene Kielsen Holm. In this article, the authors not only wish to honour the work of Lene and her imprint in Greenland and the Arctic research field, but also to acknowledge that we – as both Indigenous and non-Indi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hakon Lingner, Björn, Graugaard, Naja Dyrendom
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/15e74d3f-8520-476a-b7e9-593b7b6f596f
http://postkolonial.dk/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/9-Bjorn-and-Naja-interview-about-Lene-Kielsen-Holm.pdf
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Summary:This article is a conversation piece in memoriam of Kalaaleq researcher and scientist Lene Kielsen Holm. In this article, the authors not only wish to honour the work of Lene and her imprint in Greenland and the Arctic research field, but also to acknowledge that we – as both Indigenous and non-Indigenous researchers – still have many lessons to learn from Lene’s approach to Indigenous knowledge creation in climate research. The article is based on a conversation with two of Lene's long-time collaborators: Professor of Indigenous Studies, Suzy Basile and Professor of Anthropology, Mark Nuttall