Circumpolar Inuit Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement

Přispěvatelé: Inuit Circumpolar Council
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Popis: The Circumpolar Inuit Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement was developed through two primary processes: 1. An ICC-developed synthesis1 report of Inuit-produced materials and voices that address existing rules, laws, values, guidelines and protocols for the engagement of Inuit communities and Indigenous Knowledge, and 2. A series of workshops convening Inuit Delegates that captured Inuit knowledge, perspectives, needs, priorities and guidance on future engagement processes.2 Additionally, this work has been informed through decades of Inuit input to governments, international fora, negotiations, and ICC-led workshops, meetings, discussions, conferences, and projects occurring across communities, regionally, nationally and internationally. Our people from across Inuit Nunaat have reviewed the protocols. They have been agreed upon by the ICC Executive Council and formally approved. The world community is increasingly responsive to and respectful of the rights of Indigenous Peoples. However, for decades the interest in and research regarding the Arctic “cryosphere” has emerged without a full understanding of Inuit Nunaat -- our traditional homelands and territory, which includes Inuit, our way of life and our knowledge. Yet, through our persistence and our work as an Indigenous Peoples’ Organization, we are moving away from an approach that dismisses our Indigenous Knowledge and our way of living and closer to conditions that respect and recognize our distinct status, rights and role in the Arctic. The Circumpolar Inuit Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement are intended by ICC as a pathway for others to understand this essential dynamic. Today we maintain that the “intricate knowledge” that our founder Eben Hopson invoked in 1977 is necessary for understanding the transformations that the Arctic region and indeed the world is facing. Knowledge and the co-production of knowledge consistent with Inuit perspectives, values, rights and protocols will result in a more genuine collective effort to create greater understanding about Inuit Nunaat, about the Arctic. Co-production of knowledge with Indigenous Peoples across the globe is gaining a foothold, bit by bit. Triggered to a substantial degree, by our input as well as our political and intellectual force, we are seeing evidence of this dynamic in various contexts ranging from the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to the Agreement to Prevent Unregulated High Seas Fisheries in the Central Arctic Ocean to the Food and Agriculture Organization to the Arctic Council. This document should be accepted and seen by others as an invitation to consult and cooperate with Inuit by illustrating for researchers, decision-makers and others what is needed to genuinely be responsive to the urgent call for recognizing the interrelated, interdependent and indivisible rights of Inuit. The elements embraced in this publication can be employed by others in any facet of engagement with Inuit and the diverse subject matter that affects our day to day lives. We especially invite scientists, researchers, funders, and decision-makers to digest and ultimately implement these protocols with Inuit. Finally, we insist in a good way that overall results will produce a higher standard and quality of research beneficial for Inuit and all others. Published Current 14.7 Mature National Reports with methodological relevance
Databáze: OpenAIRE