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CANADIAN SCHOLARSISBN: 9781773385341

Indigenous Knowledges, Environmental Practice, and the Strength of Collaboration

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Sale price$120.00


Edited by Barbara Moktthewenkwe Wall, Mary-Claire Buell
Imprint: CANADIAN SCHOLARS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
248 x 171 mm
Weight:

Pages:
336

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Description

Barbara Moktthewenkwe Wall is an associate professor within the Indigenous Environmental Studies and Sciences program and the Indigenous Studies PhD program at Trent University. She is a mixed-ancestry Potawatomi woman of the Deer Clan, and an enrolled member of the federally recognized Citizen Potawatomi Nation of Shawnee, Oklahoma. An Indigenous scholar with strong ancestral and spiritual ties to the Great Lakes Basin, Barbara lives and works in Treaty 20 and the Williams Treaty territory, the traditional lands of the Michi Saagiig Anishinaabe in Ontario, Canada. Her personal and professional journey has taken her across several regions, including northern New York State, Michigan's Upper Peninsula, and the San Francisco Bay Area. These diverse lands and waters continue to shape her scholarship, community engagement, and deep commitment to Indigenous language, culture, and land-based knowledge. Mary-Claire Buell is an assistant professor, cross-appointed with the School of Environment and Department of Forensic Science at Trent University. Dr. Buell's research interests include investigating the source, fate, transport, and impacts of legacy and contemporary contaminants, examining the connections between contaminants and environmental justice, treaty rights, and food security. Her research is trans-disciplinary, bringing together environmental toxicology, chemistry, and community knowledges. Dr. Buell is a settler Canadian of Italian, German, and Irish ancestry, and was born and raised in Nogojiwanong / Peterborough, Ontario. She is also the founder of Collective Environmental; a consulting and independent research firm focused on collaborative approaches to investigating environmental issues impacting Indigenous communities. Dr. Buell holds a PhD and MSc from Trent University and a BSc from the University of Guelph.

Foreword Preface: The Inspiration and Roadmap for This Book Part I: Disrupting the Environmental Discourse Paradigm Chapter 1: A Need for Change: Conversations on Knowledge Inequities in Environmental Science and Practice Chapter 2: (Un)Learning Our Connections to Nature Chapter 3: Standing with Indigenous Science Chapter 4: Positionality: Situating Oneself within the Context of Land, Water, Identity, Privilege, and Power Chapter 5: Knowledge Equity and Ethical Space Part II: Evidence of the Shift: Examples from Various Environmental Science and Studies Fields Chapter 6: Braiding Knowledges in Landscape Science: Towards A More Holistic Understanding of Landscape Change Chapter 7: What Rivers Can Teach Us About a More Relational Approach to Water Science Chapter 8: Indigenous Kinship with Fire Chapter 9: Uprooting Colonial Conservation: Returning to Kinship Chapter 10: Expanding the Circle: Meaningful Collaboration toward Caribou Conservation in Canada Chapter 11: Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Conservation in the Peruvian Andes Chapter 12: Reframing Fisheries Research Part III: Actioning the Paradigm Shift Chapter 13: Visual Methods in Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Environmental Research Collaborations Chapter 14: Reframing and Applying Natural Science as a Tool for Ethical Collaborations Chapter 15: Language Matters: The Words We Choose Chapter 16: Tools for Transformative Change in Environmental Discourse and Practice The Words We Choose to Use: A Glossary of Terms About the Authors

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