Fall 2022 Gjoa Haven: Difference between revisions

From Knowledge-land-scape
Saskia (talk | contribs)
Saskia (talk | contribs)
Line 95: Line 95:
In the context of community-based research our movements through the world matter. Are we simply transporting ourselves from one point to another, leaving inanimate traces towards predetermined destinations, or are we finding our way along, in lively response to our own unfolding narratives and that of others around us?  
In the context of community-based research our movements through the world matter. Are we simply transporting ourselves from one point to another, leaving inanimate traces towards predetermined destinations, or are we finding our way along, in lively response to our own unfolding narratives and that of others around us?  


"Keep Going" to explore how the different research output creations have continued their material agencies beyond this cut.</div>
'''"Keep Going"''' to explore how the different research output creations have continued their material agencies beyond this cut.</div>


=Beyond the Cut=
=Beyond the Cut=

Revision as of 16:46, 2 March 2025

After losing a week in travel delays, there is a lot of preparation left to do for the final workshop in Gjoa Haven- starting with the organization of a "special meeting" with the HTA to finetune the agenda, invitees, and logistical set-up of the meeting.

Luckily, it is much easier to set up such meetings in Gjoa Haven, than it was in Coral Harbour. Due to the much wider relational network here, it was more clear how to engage in collective dialogue and logistically produce a gathering that meets community desires.

"Keep Going" to find out what the final workshop agendas in both communities, how we evaluated them and what was reported back to funders.


or,


You may "Detour" to cut 2 along our workshop preparations step-by-step. You will not return here.

Detour to cut 2: (Pre-)Gatherings

Winter 2022 Final Workshops

In Gjoa Haven we organized a three-day gathering, that was preceded by a two-day pre-workshop that fed into the design of the gathering.

In Coral Harbour we ended u with a two day final gathering, spread between school activities and the hamlet conference room.

"Keep Going" to find out how we evaluated both workshops and what was reported back to funders.


or,


"Detour" to Cut 2 for a day-to-day journey through each workshop.

Detour to Cut 2:Final Gatherings

Evaluations

Both workshops were evaluated in different ways.

In Gjoa Haven, we had conducted a pre-workshop to agree upon terms of engagement and held multiple evaluations to understand participant experiences.

In Coral Harbour, the funders were not present for the workshop, nor was our local co-PI.

The conditions had not been in place for us to organize a pre-workshop with community members during the earlier visit in the community.

So, instead we opted to hold a smaller pre-workshop, and post-workshop meeting with the two BearWatch PI's, the former government biologist of NWT and I.

Lessons Learnt

The Coral Harbour pre-workshop meeting was prefaced on "lessons-learnt" from the Gjoa Haven Gathering.

During this pre-workshop meeting, and with the input of the interpretor, we agreed upon certain processes to be applied in the Coral Harbour gathering.

Subsequently we evaluated these processes in a post-workshop evaluation with the same group of people.

Emergent insights

In February 2023, the next year, I conducted eight follow-up individual interviews with the Southern researchers, government biologist, funders of the BearWatch project and the interpretor from Gjoa Haven to discuss their experiences of the workshops, two months after it had taken place.

Not all insights are immediate, or measurable.

Sometimes, possibilities to think with- emerge from in-between the lines, rather than within them - and they may take time to unveil themselves.

My efforts to employ creative methods and aesthetic action, as a way to create new conditions and possibilities to encounter each other during the final gatherings, had seemingly succeeded in some ways, while meeting resistance in others.

While recovering from an intense final season of the BearWatch project, slowly but surely, a figure, with a renewed meaning materializes: The Shipwreck.

Explore how this "landmark" insight became a defining feature of this knowledge-land-scape.


Or,


"Keep Going" to reach the end of this cut.

Landmark: The Wreck-site

Another Point of Beginning

You have reached "Another Point of Beginning".

This is where we take account for our journey so far.

You can trace the path you have taken through this Knowledge-Land-Scape by clicking the "trace" bar in the upper left corner of your screen. It will allow you to account for some of the insights that your journey has given you.

The map below shows you the full extent of wayfaring possibilities of the scape.

Cut 3 has guided you along the journey of the community-based dynamics of the BearWatch project.

You have been able to thread your own way alongside me and many of the other agential forces that shaped this project.

In the context of community-based research our movements through the world matter. Are we simply transporting ourselves from one point to another, leaving inanimate traces towards predetermined destinations, or are we finding our way along, in lively response to our own unfolding narratives and that of others around us?

"Keep Going" to explore how the different research output creations have continued their material agencies beyond this cut.

Beyond the Cut

The wayfaring pilot was not developed further after the making the paper prototype in spring of 2022, in respect for Leonard's wishes to not further collaboration with the Bearwatch project. However, the insights that emerged from the mapping interviews, the making of the prototype, the moments that Leonard Netser took me out on the land, and our conversations, have fed further into my thinking about knowledge, and the design of this knowledge-land-scape as an extended sight for audiences to engage with my research. It has helped me to think about wayfaring as a method to think with-, and as a potential method to think-with-others. Such thinking would have undoubtedly have been much richer than it currently is, would Leonard and I have found another opening to continue our conversations. I am nevertheless thankful for our conversations so far.

The genome-based toolkit has booked more results. Over the course of 7 years, the BearWatch project has- among others a) optimized SNP and genetic sex profiling of polar bear feces - allowing non-invasive identification and sexing of individual polar bears, b) optimized meta-barcoding assays that allow the identification of vertebrate prey and plant diet identification from polar bear faeces - allowing non-invasive monitoring of diet switching of genetically tagged individual bears, c) determined the relationship between heavy metal contaminants in a polar bears faeces and it’s muscle, liver and fat profile- allowing for noninvasive monitoring of spatial and temporal contaminant loads across the Arctic and , d) optimized the species level detection of micro plastic in polar bear faeces - allowing for the real time monitoring of these contaminants in the arctic ecosystem. Such non-invasive methods will be most valuable, however, when employed as part of sustainable collaborative efforts between biologists and Inuit communities.

The insights coming from my wayfaring method and prospective aesthetic action within the BearWatch project, have materialized in insights and spaces that may allow for continued work in Gjoa Haven on renewed terms of engagement. Instead of participation and integration of Inuit Knowledge, follow-up research has now been formulated in terms of co-leadership and is preceded by a "setting of the table", which will include the negotiation of knowledge weaving methods and decision-making protocols under guidance of the ICC EEE protocols, and in according with the principles of Ethical Engagement.


Detour:Cut 2 Aesthetic Action Point of Beginning

Detour:Cut 2 Aesthetic (in)action in BearWatch

Detour:Cut 1 Voices of Thunder

Cut 3 Wayfaring the BearWatch Project