Shifting Ground: Addressing Environmental Instability through a Method of Two-Eyed Seeing in an Arctic Community

Given the necessity of addressing the impacts of climate today, research and practice must engage local ecological, cultural, and technical knowledge to drive meaningful and respectful research. Through field work and conversation in the Arctic community of Tuktoyaktuk, and a survey of building prac...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Canitz, Madsen
Other Authors: School of Architecture, Master of Architecture, Maria Arquero de Alarcon, Steve Parcell, Dustin Whalen, Sarah Bonnemaison, Not Applicable
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81528
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/81528 2023-05-15T14:47:01+02:00 Shifting Ground: Addressing Environmental Instability through a Method of Two-Eyed Seeing in an Arctic Community Canitz, Madsen School of Architecture Master of Architecture Maria Arquero de Alarcon Steve Parcell Dustin Whalen Sarah Bonnemaison Not Applicable 2022-04-12T13:32:59Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81528 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81528 Indigenous knowledge Sustainability Arctic 2022 ftdalhouse 2022-07-30T23:10:36Z Given the necessity of addressing the impacts of climate today, research and practice must engage local ecological, cultural, and technical knowledge to drive meaningful and respectful research. Through field work and conversation in the Arctic community of Tuktoyaktuk, and a survey of building practices, this thesis uses the method of Two-Eyed Seeing, developed by Mi’kmaq Elder Albert and Murdena Marshall, to harness the strengths of both Inuit knowledge and ways of knowing and Western knowledge and science. The purpose of this method is to acknowledge the success of diverse perspectives (and indigenous methodologies) in research and design. These results inform the design of a research center that leverages indigenous and Western knowledge and extracts the design implications of climate and context as a responsive design strategy. Other/Unknown Material Arctic inuit Mi’kmaq Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository Arctic Tuktoyaktuk ENVELOPE(-133.006,-133.006,69.425,69.425)
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language English
topic Indigenous knowledge
Sustainability
Arctic
spellingShingle Indigenous knowledge
Sustainability
Arctic
Canitz, Madsen
Shifting Ground: Addressing Environmental Instability through a Method of Two-Eyed Seeing in an Arctic Community
topic_facet Indigenous knowledge
Sustainability
Arctic
description Given the necessity of addressing the impacts of climate today, research and practice must engage local ecological, cultural, and technical knowledge to drive meaningful and respectful research. Through field work and conversation in the Arctic community of Tuktoyaktuk, and a survey of building practices, this thesis uses the method of Two-Eyed Seeing, developed by Mi’kmaq Elder Albert and Murdena Marshall, to harness the strengths of both Inuit knowledge and ways of knowing and Western knowledge and science. The purpose of this method is to acknowledge the success of diverse perspectives (and indigenous methodologies) in research and design. These results inform the design of a research center that leverages indigenous and Western knowledge and extracts the design implications of climate and context as a responsive design strategy.
author2 School of Architecture
Master of Architecture
Maria Arquero de Alarcon
Steve Parcell
Dustin Whalen
Sarah Bonnemaison
Not Applicable
author Canitz, Madsen
author_facet Canitz, Madsen
author_sort Canitz, Madsen
title Shifting Ground: Addressing Environmental Instability through a Method of Two-Eyed Seeing in an Arctic Community
title_short Shifting Ground: Addressing Environmental Instability through a Method of Two-Eyed Seeing in an Arctic Community
title_full Shifting Ground: Addressing Environmental Instability through a Method of Two-Eyed Seeing in an Arctic Community
title_fullStr Shifting Ground: Addressing Environmental Instability through a Method of Two-Eyed Seeing in an Arctic Community
title_full_unstemmed Shifting Ground: Addressing Environmental Instability through a Method of Two-Eyed Seeing in an Arctic Community
title_sort shifting ground: addressing environmental instability through a method of two-eyed seeing in an arctic community
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81528
long_lat ENVELOPE(-133.006,-133.006,69.425,69.425)
geographic Arctic
Tuktoyaktuk
geographic_facet Arctic
Tuktoyaktuk
genre Arctic
inuit
Mi’kmaq
genre_facet Arctic
inuit
Mi’kmaq
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81528
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