Wayfaring the BearWatch Project: Difference between revisions

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<small>Estimated time to follow this cut without detours: 20 minutes (excluding 20 minutes animated graphic documentary.)</small>
<small>Estimated time to follow this cut without detours: 20 minutes. </small>


The land invites one to move away from anthropocentric tellings - towards narrations of becoming knowledgeable in company with the seasons, snow, ice, wind, lichens, caribou and many more. Such stories leave room for us as researchers, but aren’t about us.  
The land invites one to move away from anthropocentric tellings - towards narrations of becoming knowledgeable in company with the seasons, snow, ice, wind, lichens, caribou and many more. Such stories leave room for us as researchers, but aren’t about us<ref>see Le Guin, U. K., & Haraway, D. J. (2019). The carrier bag theory of fiction (pp. 149-154). London: Ignota books. </ref>.  


[[File:DSC09826.jpg|thumb]]
[[File:Southampton Island.jpg|thumb|Spring on Southampton Island (Photograph taken by author in 2021)]]
 
 
<small><references /></small>


=Acknowledgements=
=Acknowledgements=
Line 9: Line 12:
An explicit note of acknowledgement for this cut goes out in particular to George Konana, in Gjoa Haven, and Leonard Netser in Coral Harbour.  
An explicit note of acknowledgement for this cut goes out in particular to George Konana, in Gjoa Haven, and Leonard Netser in Coral Harbour.  


Both men have taken me out on the land, the sea and the ice on multiple occasions between 2020-2023. They patiently took time to introduce me to their land and explained how they found their way in various ways and under multiple conditions. Although they graciously responded to my many questions, I am most grateful to their valuable lessons of guiding me to tag along and just be present for the ride.
Both men have taken me out on the land, the sea and the ice on multiple occasions between 2020-2023. They patiently took time to introduce me to their land and explained how they found their way in various ways and under multiple conditions.  


[[File:Leonard and George.png|thumb|Leonard Netser (left) and George Konana (right)]]
[[File:Leonard Netser and George Konana.jpg|thumb|Leonard Netser (left) and George Konana (right) photographed by author]]
 
Thank you for teaching me the valuable lesson of just tagging along and being present for the ride.


=Becoming a Wayfarer=
=Becoming a Wayfarer=


My name is Saskia de Wildt. This cut focusses on the challenge of conciliating western sciences and IQ in community-based polar bear monitoring research.
My name is Saskia de Wildt. This cut traces my PhD research as I have conducted it with-in a large Genome Canada funded research project: "BearWatch."


More precisely, it traces the processes of my PhD research as part of a large Genome Canada funded research project called BearWatch.  
Within my research I explore what it means to practice knowledge conciliation under guidance of the principles of the ‘Ethical Space of Engagement’<ref>Ermine, W. (2007). The ethical space of engagement. Indigenous Law Journal, 6(1), 193–203.</ref> and the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement (EEE<ref>Inuit Circumpolar Council (2022). Circumpolar Inuit Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement.</ref>) rather than based on data-driven needs.  


Within this project I ask the question of what it means to practice knowledge conciliation under guidance of the principles of the ‘Ethical Space of Engagement’<ref>Ermine, W. (2007). The ethical space of engagement. Indigenous Law Journal, 6(1), 193–203.</ref> and the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement (EEE<ref>Inuit Circumpolar Council (2022). Circumpolar Inuit Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement.</ref>) rather than based on data-driven needs.
<div class="next_choice">
As you make your way through this knowledge-land-scape you might, depending on the choices you make, start feeling a shift from being a reader of my research, towards becoming a wayfarer alongside my research.</div>


<div class="next_choice">To engage with such a sensitizing research question, entails making multiple shifts- as will become clear.


A shift of positioning; from distanced observer or reader to becoming an entangled “subject” – and a shift from operating based on fixed principles, to a practice of ongoing negotiations and ethical encounter.
<small><references /></small>


As you make your way through this knowledge-land-scape, depending on the choices you make, you might start feeling these shifts yourself as you may transform from being a reader of my research, towards becoming a wayfarer alongside my research.</div>
=Knowledge Conciliation in Polar Bear Research=


Tensions around knowledge co-production in polar bear monitoring and co-management remain.


<small><references /></small>
Data-driven conservation, management and monitoring of polar bears in Inuit Nunangat- while necessary to address significant data gaps on population trends and a rapidly changing Arctic environment- has also proven itself a challenging environment for the conciliation of western sciences and Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit (IQ<ref>The Inuit specific cosmology of knowing and being in the world, see N. S. D. C. Nunavut Social Development Council. (1998). Report of the Nunavut Traditional Knowledge Conference, Igloolik, March 20-24,1998. Iqaluit: Nunavut Social Development Council. 35p.</ref>). 


=Knowledge Conciliation in Polar Bear Research=
<div class="next_choice">This cut explores the methodology of "wayfaring<ref>Ingold, T. (2010). Footprints through the weather‐world: walking, breathing, knowing. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 16, S121-S139.</ref>" as an ethical practice of knowledge conciliation. </div>


The polar bear co-management regime in the Nunavut Settlement Area, is based on the 1993 Nunavut Land Claim Agreement (NLCA), that states that “Inuit must always take part in decisions on wildlife”,  while “the guiding principles and concepts of Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit (IQ) are to be described and made an integral part of the management of wildlife and habitat.” 


Despite such formalized co-management, tensions remain.  Data-driven conservation, management and monitoring of polar bears in Inuit Nunangat- while necessary to address significant data gaps on population trends and a rapidly changing Arctic environment- has also proven itself a challenging environment for the conciliation of different ways of knowing and being. 
<small><references /></small>


<div class="next_choice">This cut explores the methodology of wayfaring as a potential transformative ethical practice of knowledge conciliation.
=Wayfaring as a Sensitizing Method=


It centers the unfolding of a particular research project: ‘Bearwatch: Monitoring Impacts of Arctic Climate Change using Polar Bears, Genomics and Traditional Ecological Knowledge’ – hereafter referred to as ‘Bearwatch’.
My wayfaring approach, as will become clear, does not attempt to formulate a new, alternative, or innovative means of knowledge conciliation across cultural differences, nor does it lead to conclusive take-aways about ethical knowledge conciliation.  


Excerpts of project reports serve as a guiding cut, while you, I, and multiple others may thread our own corresponding paths alongside it. </div>
[[File:PB skulls.jpg|thumb|Two polar bear skulls at George Konana's cabin.]]


=Wayfaring as a Sensitizing Method=
It instead unsettles fixed ideas about “knowledge” towards a “coming to know”, and instead of “knowledge integration” it performs the idea of “worldly encounters”.


My wayfaring approach, as will become clear, does not attempt to formulate a new, alternative, or innovative means of knowledge conciliation across cultural differences, nor does it lead to conclusive take-aways about ethical knowledge conciliation. It instead unsettles fixed ideas about “knowledge” towards a “coming to know”, and instead of “knowledge integration” it performs the idea of “worldly encounters”.  
<div class="next_choice">
This cut centers the unfolding of a particular research project: ‘Bearwatch: Monitoring Impacts of Arctic Climate Change using Polar Bears, Genomics and Traditional Ecological Knowledge’.


[[File:DSC00022.jpg|thumb|Two polar bear skulls at George Konana's cabin.]]
Hereafter referred to as "Bearwatch."


<div class="next_choice"> '''"Keep going"''' to learn more </div>
'''"Keep going"''' to learn more </div>


=The BearWatch Project=
=The BearWatch Project=


The BearWatch project ran between 2015 and 2023, during which it sought to meaningfully engage IQ in its development of a new non-invasive genomic polar bear monitoring toolkit. The project was a collaboration between Northern communities in the Nunavut Settlement Region and the Inuvialuit Settlement Region, HTAs in Gjoa Haven and Coral Harbor, the Inuvialuit Game Council, the governments of Nunavut, Northwest Territories, and Yukon, the Canadian Rangers, and researchers and students from multiple universities across Canada and beyond.  
The BearWatch project ran between 2015 and 2023, during which it sought to meaningfully engage IQ in its development of a new non-invasive genomic polar bear monitoring toolkit.


Most researchers and policymakers in the field of polar bear science more generally – and on the BearWatch project particularly – are trained in a variety of natural science disciplines of the western academic institute, or they are Inuit knowledge and rights holders. I, myself, am a white, queer, settler-guest researcher from the Netherlands with a background in the applied arts and social sciences, which has required me to negotiate and navigate my own way of meaning making alongside many of the project’s activities.  
<div class="next_choice">
This cut is guided by excerpts of its project reports.</div>


<div class="next_choice">This particular cut, in turn, allows you thread your own way of becoming knowledgeable about how the BearWatch project may, or may not, have come to matter in terms of ethical engagement and meaningful knowledge conciliation.
=Transdisciplinary Threading=


But before you keep going, notice that you have stumbled upon a "Vista".  
The paths you will navigate alongside this project, interweave and correspond with that of mine, and with those of researchers and policymakers in the field of polar bear science, with polar bears themselves, community members, ice-pressure ridges, snowdrifts, silly hats and many more...


This '''"Vista"''' is a viewpoint, it will help you orient. It is called "The Ethical Space of Engagement". </div>
<div class="next_choice">
But before you set on your way, notice that you have stumbled upon a "Vista".
 
This '''"Vista"''' is a viewpoint. Go check it out!</div>


<span class="pop-up vista link" data-page-title="The_ESE_(process)" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="Vista">[[The_ESE_(process)|Vista: The ESE]]</span>
<span class="pop-up vista link" data-page-title="The_ESE_(process)" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="Vista">[[The_ESE_(process)|Vista: The ESE]]</span>
Line 66: Line 76:
=Decision-making=
=Decision-making=


You now have a choice to make. Will you trace the most straightforward path across the BearWatch project, engaging mostly with the project reports of BearWatch? Or will you start threading your own intra-dependent way alongside the project and me?
You now have a choice to make.  


[[File:Invitation background a.png|thumb]]
Will you trace the most straightforward path along the reports of BearWatch project? Or will you start threading your own path as you feel your way forward in response to the company you may encounter along the way?


<div class="next_choice">If you have not yet checked out the terms of engagement of this knowledge-land-scape, you should seek them out - find them on the bottom right corner of your screen.  
 
[[File:Invitation background.jpg|thumb]]
 
<div class="next_choice">If you have not yet checked out the '''"Terms of Engagement"''' of this knowledge-land-scape, you should seek them out - find them on the bottom right corner of your screen.  




Line 82: Line 95:




'''"Keep going"''' to keep following this cut instead.
'''"Keep going"''' to keep following this cut instead.</div>
 
You will jump straight into the BearWatch project- beginning with the TEK workshops that were held in the community of Gjoa Haven in 2019 as to inform a feasibility study on future community-driven polar bear fecal sample collection.</div>


<span class="detour to-cut-3 link" data-page-title="Intra-dependency" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[intra-dependency|Detour: look up the meaning of "intra-dependency"]]</span>
<span class="detour to-cut-3 link" data-page-title="Intra-dependency" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[intra-dependency|Detour: look up the meaning of "intra-dependency"]]</span>
Line 90: Line 101:
=TEK Workshops=
=TEK Workshops=


The BearWatch project was designed to include a “Genomics and its Environmental, Economic, Ethical, Legal and Social aspects (GE3LS)” component (BearWatch research proposal, 2016 p.30-31).
From here, you jump straight into the BearWatch project- beginning with the TEK workshops that were held in the community of Gjoa Haven in 2019 as to inform a feasibility study on future community-driven polar bear fecal sample collection.
 
The BearWatch project was designed to include a “Genomics and its Environmental, Economic, Ethical, Legal and Social aspects (GE3LS)” component  


Three TEK mapping workshops were co-designed with the HTA of Gjoa Haven, as part of this GE3Ls strategy to ‘identify TEK gaps’ and ‘fill them’.  
Three TEK mapping workshops were co-designed with the HTA of Gjoa Haven, as part of the projects GE3LS strategy to ‘identify TEK gaps’ and ‘fill them’<ref>BearWatch research proposal, 2016 p.30-31</ref>.  


[[File:Mapping TEK Gjoa Haven 2019.jpg|thumb|Participants discussing during BearWatch TEK workshop 2019]]
[[File:Mapping TEK Gjoa Haven 2019.jpg|thumb|Participants discussing during BearWatch TEK workshop 2019]]


There is also another kind of workshop lined up:
<div class="next_choice">You have taken a moment to sit down and read what Genome Canada has written on their website about GE3LS.
 
The Gjoa Haven Gjoa Haven Hunters and Trappers Association has urgently been trying to get the BearWatch researchers to turn their focus towards the available polar bear harvest quota. After two generations of hardly being able to hunt polar bears, the Gjoa Haven HTA have asked the researchers of the BearWatch project to help them seek recognition for the loss of income, loss of culture, and loss of intergenerational knowledge transfer.  


<div class="next_choice">You have taken a moment to sit down and read what Genome Canada has written on their website about GE3LS, as someone brings up the existence of a nearby shipwreck: "Knowledge Co-production”.  
Then someone brings up the existence of a nearby shipwreck: "Knowledge Co-production”. They suggest you go check it out to get a deeper understanding of the im/possibilities around bringing IQ together with western sciences.  
 
They suggest you go check it out to get a deeper understanding of the im/possibilities around bringing IQ together with western sciences.  


You weigh your options,  
You weigh your options,  


'''"Detour"''', to read about GE3LS.


'''"Keep going"''' to move on with the project.


Or,
Or,


'''"Detour"''', to read about GE3LS.


'''"Keep going"''' to attend these impacts workshop.
Or,




Or,
Check out the '''"Wrecksite"''' of "Knowledge Co-production"</div>


 
<small><references /></small>
First, go check out the '''"Wrecksite"''' of "Knowledge Co-production"</div>


<span class="detour to-cut-3 link" data-page-title="GE3Ls" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[GE3Ls|Detour: Read more about GE3Ls]]</span>
<span class="detour to-cut-3 link" data-page-title="GE3Ls" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[GE3Ls|Detour: Read more about GE3Ls]]</span>
Line 126: Line 136:
=Workshops Summer 2019=
=Workshops Summer 2019=


[[File:Mapping TEK Gjoa Haven 2019.jpg|thumb|Participants discussing during BearWatch TEK workshop 2019]]
The Gjoa Haven Hunters and Trappers Association (HTA) doesn't want to "keep going," however.
 
They have urgently been trying to get the BearWatch researchers to turn their focus towards the available polar bear harvest quota.
 
After two generations of hardly being able to hunt polar bears, the Gjoa Haven HTA have asked the researchers of the BearWatch project to help them seek recognition for the loss of income, loss of culture, and loss of intergenerational knowledge transfer.
 
[[File:Gjoa Haven's Appeal.mp3|thumb]]
 
=Going on the Record=


Two workshops were organized in response to community requests, to record the impacts of polar bear hunting quota reductions on the community.  
Two workshops were organized in response to community requests, to record the impacts of polar bear hunting quota reductions on the community.  
Line 136: Line 154:
The BearWatch PI's and Gjoa Haven HTA-board want to use these recordings as primary materials for an academic paper.  
The BearWatch PI's and Gjoa Haven HTA-board want to use these recordings as primary materials for an academic paper.  


They ask me to write it.
They ask me to write it. However, I have just learnt about this project and have not yet set foot into the community.


<div class="next_choice">  
<div class="next_choice">  
I have just learnt about this project and have not yet set foot into the community. Although I understand that writing “about” other people’s experiences doesn’t exactly sound ethical, the Gjoa Haven HTA wants a publication, so maybe there is no need to complicate things further?  
'''What would you do?'''


What would you do?


'''"Stay with the Trouble"''' to explore how the “Politics of recognition” can complicate such writing- even if it risks completely derailing you from your course.


'''"Stay with the Trouble"''' and explore what is possible, while also keeping in mind how the “Politics of recognition” can complicate such writing practices.


Or,


Or,


'''"Keep going"''' to not engage further with the community of Gjoa Haven for now, and prepare for your first fieldtrip to the North- to Coral Harbour.


Choose to not engage further with the community of Gjoa Haven for now.
(The Gjoa Haven HTA wants a publication, so maybe there is no need to complicate things further for the moment?)
'''"Keep going"''' to trace Cut 3: the unfolding of the BearWatch project, and prepare for your first fieldtrip to Coral Harbour.
</div>  
</div>  


<span class="pop-up stay-with-the-trouble link" data-page-title=" Politics_of_Recognition " data-encounter-type="Stay with the trouble">[[Politics of Recognition|Stay with the trouble: The Politics of Recognition]]</span>
<span class="pop-up stay-with-the-trouble link" data-page-title=" Politics_of_Recognition " data-encounter-type="Stay with the trouble">[[Politics of Recognition|Stay with the trouble: The Politics of Recognition]]</span>


=Coral Harbour First Trip 2020=
=Coral Harbour First Trip 2020=  
 
[[File:Coral Harbour May 2022.jpg|thumb|Photograph of Salliq (Photograph by author, May 2022)]]


Alongside funding from Genome Canada, the project PI’s also successfully applied to the Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada/ World Wildlife Fund to fund ‘traditional knowledge research and a denning survey in Coral Harbour, Nunavut’ (Schedule H, 2020, March 31. This intended study included documenting polar bear TEK in Coral Harbour, surveys of vacated dens by locals to collect a variety of samples and data, and the initiation of a collaborative effort with the high school to train students in land-based surveys.
Alongside funding from Genome Canada, the project PI’s also successfully applied to the Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada/ World Wildlife Fund to fund ‘traditional knowledge research and a denning survey in Coral Harbour, Nunavut’ (Schedule H, 2020, March 31. This intended study included documenting polar bear TEK in Coral Harbour, surveys of vacated dens by locals to collect a variety of samples and data, and the initiation of a collaborative effort with the high school to train students in land-based surveys.
[[File:DSC01008.jpg|thumb]]


<div class="next_choice">However, before you start, you hit an '''"Ice-Pressure Ridge"'''. The Covid virus has so rapidly spread, the World Health Organization declared it a pandemic on March 20, 2020.</div>
<div class="next_choice">However, before you start, you hit an '''"Ice-Pressure Ridge"'''. The Covid virus has so rapidly spread, the World Health Organization declared it a pandemic on March 20, 2020.</div>


<span class="redirective ice-pressure_ridge link" data-page-title="Covid-19" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="ice-pressure_ridge">[[Covid-19|Ice-pressure ridge: Immediately book a flight back]]</span>
<span class="redirective ice-pressure_ridge link" data-page-title="Covid-19" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="ice-pressure_ridge">[[Covid-19|Ice-pressure ridge: Immediately book a flight back]]</span>

Latest revision as of 11:02, 18 July 2025

Estimated time to follow this cut without detours: 20 minutes.

The land invites one to move away from anthropocentric tellings - towards narrations of becoming knowledgeable in company with the seasons, snow, ice, wind, lichens, caribou and many more. Such stories leave room for us as researchers, but aren’t about us[1].

Spring on Southampton Island (Photograph taken by author in 2021)


  1. see Le Guin, U. K., & Haraway, D. J. (2019). The carrier bag theory of fiction (pp. 149-154). London: Ignota books.

Acknowledgements[edit]

An explicit note of acknowledgement for this cut goes out in particular to George Konana, in Gjoa Haven, and Leonard Netser in Coral Harbour.

Both men have taken me out on the land, the sea and the ice on multiple occasions between 2020-2023. They patiently took time to introduce me to their land and explained how they found their way in various ways and under multiple conditions.

Leonard Netser (left) and George Konana (right) photographed by author

Thank you for teaching me the valuable lesson of just tagging along and being present for the ride.

Becoming a Wayfarer[edit]

My name is Saskia de Wildt. This cut traces my PhD research as I have conducted it with-in a large Genome Canada funded research project: "BearWatch."

Within my research I explore what it means to practice knowledge conciliation under guidance of the principles of the ‘Ethical Space of Engagement’[1] and the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement (EEE[2]) rather than based on data-driven needs.

As you make your way through this knowledge-land-scape you might, depending on the choices you make, start feeling a shift from being a reader of my research, towards becoming a wayfarer alongside my research.


  1. Ermine, W. (2007). The ethical space of engagement. Indigenous Law Journal, 6(1), 193–203.
  2. Inuit Circumpolar Council (2022). Circumpolar Inuit Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement.

Knowledge Conciliation in Polar Bear Research[edit]

Tensions around knowledge co-production in polar bear monitoring and co-management remain.

Data-driven conservation, management and monitoring of polar bears in Inuit Nunangat- while necessary to address significant data gaps on population trends and a rapidly changing Arctic environment- has also proven itself a challenging environment for the conciliation of western sciences and Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit (IQ[1]).

This cut explores the methodology of "wayfaring[2]" as an ethical practice of knowledge conciliation.


  1. The Inuit specific cosmology of knowing and being in the world, see N. S. D. C. Nunavut Social Development Council. (1998). Report of the Nunavut Traditional Knowledge Conference, Igloolik, March 20-24,1998. Iqaluit: Nunavut Social Development Council. 35p.
  2. Ingold, T. (2010). Footprints through the weather‐world: walking, breathing, knowing. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 16, S121-S139.

Wayfaring as a Sensitizing Method[edit]

My wayfaring approach, as will become clear, does not attempt to formulate a new, alternative, or innovative means of knowledge conciliation across cultural differences, nor does it lead to conclusive take-aways about ethical knowledge conciliation.

Two polar bear skulls at George Konana's cabin.

It instead unsettles fixed ideas about “knowledge” towards a “coming to know”, and instead of “knowledge integration” it performs the idea of “worldly encounters”.

This cut centers the unfolding of a particular research project: ‘Bearwatch: Monitoring Impacts of Arctic Climate Change using Polar Bears, Genomics and Traditional Ecological Knowledge’.

Hereafter referred to as "Bearwatch."

"Keep going" to learn more

The BearWatch Project[edit]

The BearWatch project ran between 2015 and 2023, during which it sought to meaningfully engage IQ in its development of a new non-invasive genomic polar bear monitoring toolkit.

This cut is guided by excerpts of its project reports.

Transdisciplinary Threading[edit]

The paths you will navigate alongside this project, interweave and correspond with that of mine, and with those of researchers and policymakers in the field of polar bear science, with polar bears themselves, community members, ice-pressure ridges, snowdrifts, silly hats and many more...

But before you set on your way, notice that you have stumbled upon a "Vista".

This "Vista" is a viewpoint. Go check it out!

Vista: The ESE

Decision-making[edit]

You now have a choice to make.

Will you trace the most straightforward path along the reports of BearWatch project? Or will you start threading your own path as you feel your way forward in response to the company you may encounter along the way?


If you have not yet checked out the "Terms of Engagement" of this knowledge-land-scape, you should seek them out - find them on the bottom right corner of your screen.


Otherwise,


Take a "Detour" to look up the meaning of “intra” dependency, as opposed to “interdependency” before you keep going.


Or,


"Keep going" to keep following this cut instead.

Detour: look up the meaning of "intra-dependency"

TEK Workshops[edit]

From here, you jump straight into the BearWatch project- beginning with the TEK workshops that were held in the community of Gjoa Haven in 2019 as to inform a feasibility study on future community-driven polar bear fecal sample collection.

The BearWatch project was designed to include a “Genomics and its Environmental, Economic, Ethical, Legal and Social aspects (GE3LS)” component

Three TEK mapping workshops were co-designed with the HTA of Gjoa Haven, as part of the projects GE3LS strategy to ‘identify TEK gaps’ and ‘fill them’[1].

Participants discussing during BearWatch TEK workshop 2019
You have taken a moment to sit down and read what Genome Canada has written on their website about GE3LS.

Then someone brings up the existence of a nearby shipwreck: "Knowledge Co-production”. They suggest you go check it out to get a deeper understanding of the im/possibilities around bringing IQ together with western sciences.

You weigh your options,


"Keep going" to move on with the project.

Or,


"Detour", to read about GE3LS.

Or,


Check out the "Wrecksite" of "Knowledge Co-production"
  1. BearWatch research proposal, 2016 p.30-31

Detour: Read more about GE3Ls

Wrecksite: Knowledge Co-production

Workshops Summer 2019[edit]

The Gjoa Haven Hunters and Trappers Association (HTA) doesn't want to "keep going," however.

They have urgently been trying to get the BearWatch researchers to turn their focus towards the available polar bear harvest quota.

After two generations of hardly being able to hunt polar bears, the Gjoa Haven HTA have asked the researchers of the BearWatch project to help them seek recognition for the loss of income, loss of culture, and loss of intergenerational knowledge transfer.

Going on the Record[edit]

Two workshops were organized in response to community requests, to record the impacts of polar bear hunting quota reductions on the community.

One workshop was held May 15, 2019 in the evening with 10 participants and one on May 16 in the morning with 11 participants.

Both workshops were audio-recorded.

The BearWatch PI's and Gjoa Haven HTA-board want to use these recordings as primary materials for an academic paper.

They ask me to write it. However, I have just learnt about this project and have not yet set foot into the community.

What would you do?


"Stay with the Trouble" to explore how the “Politics of recognition” can complicate such writing- even if it risks completely derailing you from your course.


Or,


"Keep going" to not engage further with the community of Gjoa Haven for now, and prepare for your first fieldtrip to the North- to Coral Harbour.

(The Gjoa Haven HTA wants a publication, so maybe there is no need to complicate things further for the moment?)

Stay with the trouble: The Politics of Recognition

Coral Harbour First Trip 2020[edit]

Photograph of Salliq (Photograph by author, May 2022)

Alongside funding from Genome Canada, the project PI’s also successfully applied to the Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada/ World Wildlife Fund to fund ‘traditional knowledge research and a denning survey in Coral Harbour, Nunavut’ (Schedule H, 2020, March 31. This intended study included documenting polar bear TEK in Coral Harbour, surveys of vacated dens by locals to collect a variety of samples and data, and the initiation of a collaborative effort with the high school to train students in land-based surveys.

However, before you start, you hit an "Ice-Pressure Ridge". The Covid virus has so rapidly spread, the World Health Organization declared it a pandemic on March 20, 2020.

Ice-pressure ridge: Immediately book a flight back