Taking care of knowledge, taking care of salmon: towards Indigenous data sovereignty in an era of climate change and cumulative effects
S.E. Cannon,
J.W. Moore,
M.S. Adams,
T. Degai,
E. Griggs,
J. Griggs,
T. Marsden,
A.J. Reid,
N. Sainsbury,
K.M. Stirling,
Axdii A. Yee S. Barnes,
R. Benson,
D. Burrows,
Gala'game R. Chamberlin,
B. Charley,
D. Dick,
A.T. Duncan,
Kung Kayangas M. Liddle,
M. Paul,
N. Paul Prince,
C. Scotnicki,
K. Speck,
J. Squakin,
C. Van Der Minne,
J. Walkus,
K. West,
Kii'iljuus B. Wilson
Affiliations
S.E. Cannon
Simon Fraser University, Salmon Watersheds Laboratory, Department of Biological Sciences, 888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada
J.W. Moore
Simon Fraser University, Salmon Watersheds Laboratory, Department of Biological Sciences, 888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada
M.S. Adams
University of British Columbia, Conservation Decisions Laboratory, Faculty of Forestry, Forest Sciences Centre, 2424 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada
T. Degai
Department of Anthropology, University of Victoria, Cornett Building B228, Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada
E. Griggs
Simon Fraser University, Salmon Watersheds Laboratory, Department of Biological Sciences, 888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada
In this paper, we argue that Indigenous data sovereignty (IDS) is vital for addressing threats to ecosystems, as well as for Indigenous Peoples re-establishing and maintaining sovereignty over their territories. Indigenous knowledge-holders face pressure from non-Indigenous scientists to collaborate to address environmental problems, while the open data movement is pressuring them to make their data public. We examine the role of IDS in the context of cumulative effects and climate change that threaten salmon-bearing ecosystems in British Columbia, guided by content from an online workshop in June 2022 and attended exclusively by a Tier-1 audience (First Nations knowledge-holders and/or technical staff working for Nations). Attention to data is required for fruitful collaborations between Indigenous communities and non-Indigenous researchers to address the impacts of climate change and the cumulative effects affecting salmon-bearing watersheds in BC. In addition, we provide steps that Indigenous governments can take to assert sovereignty over data, recommendations that external researchers can use to ensure they respect IDS, and questions that external researchers and Indigenous partners can discuss to guide decision-making about data management. Finally, we reflect on what we learned during the process of co-creating materials.