Anishinaabe Adaptation to Environmental Change in Northwestern Ontario: a Case Study in Knowledge Coproduction for Nontimber Forest Products

Interaction, negotiation, and sharing knowledge are at the heart of indigenous response to global environmental change. We consider Anishinaabe efforts to devise new institutional arrangements in response to the process of colonialism and changing global markets. Our findings are based on collaborat...

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Main Authors: Davidson-Hunt, Iain J, Pengelly, Ryan D., Sylvester, Olivia
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art44/
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spelling ftjecolog:oai:.www.ecologyandsociety.org:article/6001 2023-05-15T13:28:56+02:00 Anishinaabe Adaptation to Environmental Change in Northwestern Ontario: a Case Study in Knowledge Coproduction for Nontimber Forest Products Davidson-Hunt, Iain J Pengelly, Ryan D. Sylvester, Olivia 2013-11-22 text/html application/pdf http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art44/ en eng Resilience Alliance Ecology and Society; Vol. 18, No. 4 (2013) Anishinaabe; boreal forest; Canada; coproduction of knowledge; global environmental change Peer-Reviewed Reports 2013 ftjecolog 2019-04-09T11:22:54Z Interaction, negotiation, and sharing knowledge are at the heart of indigenous response to global environmental change. We consider Anishinaabe efforts to devise new institutional arrangements in response to the process of colonialism and changing global markets. Our findings are based on collaborative research undertaken with Anishinaabe colleagues from Pikangikum First Nation, northwestern Ontario. We worked with elders to understand their knowledge, preferences, and opinions regarding appropriate institutional arrangements for the co-production of knowledge required to develop nontimber forest products. We began our research by asking about the values, institutions, and conditions that guide plant harvesting, and then the conditions necessary to coproduce new knowledge regarding plant products with external partners. Results were discussed during focus groups and community meetings, and were modified based on that feedback. This research resulted in a framework based on the values, institutions, and conditions that are necessary for the coproduction of new knowledge. In this framework, Pikangikum people—through Anishinaabe teachings and collaborative partnerships—guide knowledge coproduction through meaningful participation as research advisors in the development of knowledge, institutions, and technologies. Coproducing knowledge in response to environmental change requires new institutional arrangements that provide community control, meaningful collaboration and partnerships, and significant benefit sharing with Pikangikum people. Other/Unknown Material anishina* Unknown Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftjecolog
language English
topic Anishinaabe; boreal forest; Canada; coproduction of knowledge; global environmental change
spellingShingle Anishinaabe; boreal forest; Canada; coproduction of knowledge; global environmental change
Davidson-Hunt, Iain J
Pengelly, Ryan D.
Sylvester, Olivia
Anishinaabe Adaptation to Environmental Change in Northwestern Ontario: a Case Study in Knowledge Coproduction for Nontimber Forest Products
topic_facet Anishinaabe; boreal forest; Canada; coproduction of knowledge; global environmental change
description Interaction, negotiation, and sharing knowledge are at the heart of indigenous response to global environmental change. We consider Anishinaabe efforts to devise new institutional arrangements in response to the process of colonialism and changing global markets. Our findings are based on collaborative research undertaken with Anishinaabe colleagues from Pikangikum First Nation, northwestern Ontario. We worked with elders to understand their knowledge, preferences, and opinions regarding appropriate institutional arrangements for the co-production of knowledge required to develop nontimber forest products. We began our research by asking about the values, institutions, and conditions that guide plant harvesting, and then the conditions necessary to coproduce new knowledge regarding plant products with external partners. Results were discussed during focus groups and community meetings, and were modified based on that feedback. This research resulted in a framework based on the values, institutions, and conditions that are necessary for the coproduction of new knowledge. In this framework, Pikangikum people—through Anishinaabe teachings and collaborative partnerships—guide knowledge coproduction through meaningful participation as research advisors in the development of knowledge, institutions, and technologies. Coproducing knowledge in response to environmental change requires new institutional arrangements that provide community control, meaningful collaboration and partnerships, and significant benefit sharing with Pikangikum people.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Davidson-Hunt, Iain J
Pengelly, Ryan D.
Sylvester, Olivia
author_facet Davidson-Hunt, Iain J
Pengelly, Ryan D.
Sylvester, Olivia
author_sort Davidson-Hunt, Iain J
title Anishinaabe Adaptation to Environmental Change in Northwestern Ontario: a Case Study in Knowledge Coproduction for Nontimber Forest Products
title_short Anishinaabe Adaptation to Environmental Change in Northwestern Ontario: a Case Study in Knowledge Coproduction for Nontimber Forest Products
title_full Anishinaabe Adaptation to Environmental Change in Northwestern Ontario: a Case Study in Knowledge Coproduction for Nontimber Forest Products
title_fullStr Anishinaabe Adaptation to Environmental Change in Northwestern Ontario: a Case Study in Knowledge Coproduction for Nontimber Forest Products
title_full_unstemmed Anishinaabe Adaptation to Environmental Change in Northwestern Ontario: a Case Study in Knowledge Coproduction for Nontimber Forest Products
title_sort anishinaabe adaptation to environmental change in northwestern ontario: a case study in knowledge coproduction for nontimber forest products
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2013
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art44/
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_source Ecology and Society; Vol. 18, No. 4 (2013)
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