Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ocean Observing: A Review of Successful Partnerships

Understanding and management of the marine environment requires respect for, and inclusion of, Indigenous knowledge, cultures, and traditional practices. The Aha Honua, an ocean observing declaration from Coastal Indigenous Peoples, calls on the ocean observing community to “formally recognize the t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: MaryJane Proulx, Lydia Ross, Christina Macdonald, Shayla Fitzsimmons, Michael Smit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.703938/full
id doaj-09ccc34dd06c4949ad5b811d52c2434f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-09ccc34dd06c4949ad5b811d52c2434f2021-07-16T13:58:58ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452021-07-01810.3389/fmars.2021.703938703938Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ocean Observing: A Review of Successful PartnershipsMaryJane Proulx0MaryJane Proulx1Lydia Ross2Lydia Ross3Christina Macdonald4Christina Macdonald5Shayla Fitzsimmons6Michael Smit7Michael Smit8Canadian Integrated Ocean Observing System - Atlantic, Ocean Frontier Institute, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, CanadaThe Canadian Canoe Museum, Peterborough, ON, CanadaCanadian Integrated Ocean Observing System - Atlantic, Ocean Frontier Institute, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, CanadaCoastal and Ocean Information Network - Atlantic (COINAtlantic), Halifax, NS, CanadaCanadian Integrated Ocean Observing System - Atlantic, Ocean Frontier Institute, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, CanadaCoastal and Ocean Information Network - Atlantic (COINAtlantic), Halifax, NS, CanadaCanadian Integrated Ocean Observing System - Atlantic, Ocean Frontier Institute, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, CanadaCanadian Integrated Ocean Observing System - Atlantic, Ocean Frontier Institute, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, CanadaSchool of Information Management, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, CanadaUnderstanding and management of the marine environment requires respect for, and inclusion of, Indigenous knowledge, cultures, and traditional practices. The Aha Honua, an ocean observing declaration from Coastal Indigenous Peoples, calls on the ocean observing community to “formally recognize the traditional knowledge of Indigenous peoples,” and “to learn and respect each other’s ways of knowing.” Ocean observing systems typically adopt open data sharing as a core principle, often requiring that data be Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR). Without modification, this approach to Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) would mean disregarding historical and ongoing injustices and imbalances in power, and information management principles designed to address these wrongs. Excluding TEK from global ocean observing is not equitable or desirable. Ocean observing systems tend to align with settler geography, but their chosen regions often include Indigenous coastal-dwelling communities that have acted as caretakers and stewards of the land and ocean for thousands of years. Achieving the call of Aha Honua will require building relationships that recognize Indigenous peoples play a special role in the area of ocean stewardship, care, and understanding. This review examines the current understanding of how Indigenous TEK can be successfully coordinated or utilized alongside western scientific systems, specifically the potential coordination of TEK with ocean observing systems. We identify relevant methods and collaborative projects, including cases where TEK has been collected, digitized and the meta(data) has been made open under some or all the FAIR principles. This review also highlights enabling factors that notably contribute to successful outcomes in digitization, and mitigation measures to avoid the decontextualization of TEK. Recommendations are primarily value- and process-based, rather than action-based, and acknowledge the key limitation that this review is based on extant written knowledge. In cases where examples are provided, or local context is necessary to be concrete, we refer to a motivating example of the nascent Atlantic Regional Association of the Canadian Integrated Ocean Observing System and their desire to build relationships with Indigenous communities.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.703938/fulltraditional ecological knowledgeresearch data managementocean observing systemsFAIRindigenous knowledgeCARE
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author MaryJane Proulx
MaryJane Proulx
Lydia Ross
Lydia Ross
Christina Macdonald
Christina Macdonald
Shayla Fitzsimmons
Michael Smit
Michael Smit
spellingShingle MaryJane Proulx
MaryJane Proulx
Lydia Ross
Lydia Ross
Christina Macdonald
Christina Macdonald
Shayla Fitzsimmons
Michael Smit
Michael Smit
Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ocean Observing: A Review of Successful Partnerships
Frontiers in Marine Science
traditional ecological knowledge
research data management
ocean observing systems
FAIR
indigenous knowledge
CARE
author_facet MaryJane Proulx
MaryJane Proulx
Lydia Ross
Lydia Ross
Christina Macdonald
Christina Macdonald
Shayla Fitzsimmons
Michael Smit
Michael Smit
author_sort MaryJane Proulx
title Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ocean Observing: A Review of Successful Partnerships
title_short Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ocean Observing: A Review of Successful Partnerships
title_full Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ocean Observing: A Review of Successful Partnerships
title_fullStr Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ocean Observing: A Review of Successful Partnerships
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ocean Observing: A Review of Successful Partnerships
title_sort indigenous traditional ecological knowledge and ocean observing: a review of successful partnerships
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Understanding and management of the marine environment requires respect for, and inclusion of, Indigenous knowledge, cultures, and traditional practices. The Aha Honua, an ocean observing declaration from Coastal Indigenous Peoples, calls on the ocean observing community to “formally recognize the traditional knowledge of Indigenous peoples,” and “to learn and respect each other’s ways of knowing.” Ocean observing systems typically adopt open data sharing as a core principle, often requiring that data be Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR). Without modification, this approach to Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) would mean disregarding historical and ongoing injustices and imbalances in power, and information management principles designed to address these wrongs. Excluding TEK from global ocean observing is not equitable or desirable. Ocean observing systems tend to align with settler geography, but their chosen regions often include Indigenous coastal-dwelling communities that have acted as caretakers and stewards of the land and ocean for thousands of years. Achieving the call of Aha Honua will require building relationships that recognize Indigenous peoples play a special role in the area of ocean stewardship, care, and understanding. This review examines the current understanding of how Indigenous TEK can be successfully coordinated or utilized alongside western scientific systems, specifically the potential coordination of TEK with ocean observing systems. We identify relevant methods and collaborative projects, including cases where TEK has been collected, digitized and the meta(data) has been made open under some or all the FAIR principles. This review also highlights enabling factors that notably contribute to successful outcomes in digitization, and mitigation measures to avoid the decontextualization of TEK. Recommendations are primarily value- and process-based, rather than action-based, and acknowledge the key limitation that this review is based on extant written knowledge. In cases where examples are provided, or local context is necessary to be concrete, we refer to a motivating example of the nascent Atlantic Regional Association of the Canadian Integrated Ocean Observing System and their desire to build relationships with Indigenous communities.
topic traditional ecological knowledge
research data management
ocean observing systems
FAIR
indigenous knowledge
CARE
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.703938/full
work_keys_str_mv AT maryjaneproulx indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
AT maryjaneproulx indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
AT lydiaross indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
AT lydiaross indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
AT christinamacdonald indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
AT christinamacdonald indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
AT shaylafitzsimmons indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
AT michaelsmit indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
AT michaelsmit indigenoustraditionalecologicalknowledgeandoceanobservingareviewofsuccessfulpartnerships
_version_ 1721297607699988480