Workshop Coral Harbour
2-Day Workshop Coral Harbour
During the main gathering in Coral Harbour, BearWatch researchers from the South, both in person and virtually, gave a series of presentations outlining new, non-invasive tools and a new way to determine the cost effectiveness of the collection of various types of polar bear data. These presentations were followed with a summary of all the non-invasive work that was carried out and led by community hunters and PI Leonard Netser on Southampton Island with CIRNAC support over the last four years. This included scat collection, bear den location and excavation, and optimization efforts for the collection of snow from polar bear tracks for genetic analysis. The final activity of the gathering was a workshop-like activity seeking insights from local hunters and community members on how to ‘live with bears’ (versus the current management via quota system).
Due to an explicit absence of our local PI, the focus of our workshop had shifted considerably towards the local high-school. Our project research permit, however, did not cover school activities, and as such this track only presents what we did, not how our activities in the high-school would contribute to the knowledge conciliation in terms of ethical space of engagement. Neither did we have the input from a community advisory board like we had had in Gjoa Haven, to design the workshop sessions in a way that could be analysed or evaluated in terms of how the community would prefer to meet in a "good way".
Stay with the trouble: Politics of In-action and Refusal
School Bingo, Lunch, Presentation
Day 1: Building Qamutiq (Morning)
Highschool students and researchers from the south participated together in building a Qamutik under guidance of Ross Eetuk, the school workshop teacher. The purpose of the event was to give stunts the experience of building a Qamutik, to encourage knowledge transfer across cultures, and provide an opportunity to connect and create together.

