TY - JOUR
T1 - Our lands tell our stories
T2 - supporting Indigenous co-led research through the Indigenous Foods Knowledges Network
AU - Jäger, Mary Beth
AU - Johnson, Noor
AU - Burk, Eva
AU - Christensen, Nels
AU - Ferguson, Daniel B.
AU - Honani, Samantha
AU - Huntington, Orville
AU - Larson, Shawna
AU - Jennings, Lydia
AU - Johnson, Michael Kotutwa
AU - Juan, Amy
AU - Strawhacker, Colleen
AU - Taylor, Max
AU - Todd, Wendy F.
AU - Walker, Althea
AU - Carroll, Stephanie Russo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s).
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The Indigenous Foods Knowledges Network (IFKN) brings together Indigenous researchers and community leaders from the Arctic and U.S. Southwest along with non-Indigenous researchers to foster cross-cultural interdisciplinary knowledge exchange about sovereignty of Indigenous foods. IFKN draws on cultural and scientific expertise from shared cultural protocols and practices, Indigenous Knowledges, Earth sciences, and social sciences to better understand reclamation, preservation, and perpetuation of traditional food practices to sustain Indigenous food sovereignty in a rapidly changing global environment. In this article, we discuss how IFKN developed a methodology prioritizing relational accountability encompassing both people and place while establishing a framework for collaborative learning that centers Indigenous Knowledge systems. We provide examples from our roles as Tribal community members, university researchers, and network members in creating an organizational framework for this collaborative work and connecting it to community, university, and research protocols and practices. We further describe the ways that IFKN adapted during the COVID-19 pandemic to continue to remotely co-produce knowledge and amplify concerns and priorities of community partners through non-academic settings.
AB - The Indigenous Foods Knowledges Network (IFKN) brings together Indigenous researchers and community leaders from the Arctic and U.S. Southwest along with non-Indigenous researchers to foster cross-cultural interdisciplinary knowledge exchange about sovereignty of Indigenous foods. IFKN draws on cultural and scientific expertise from shared cultural protocols and practices, Indigenous Knowledges, Earth sciences, and social sciences to better understand reclamation, preservation, and perpetuation of traditional food practices to sustain Indigenous food sovereignty in a rapidly changing global environment. In this article, we discuss how IFKN developed a methodology prioritizing relational accountability encompassing both people and place while establishing a framework for collaborative learning that centers Indigenous Knowledge systems. We provide examples from our roles as Tribal community members, university researchers, and network members in creating an organizational framework for this collaborative work and connecting it to community, university, and research protocols and practices. We further describe the ways that IFKN adapted during the COVID-19 pandemic to continue to remotely co-produce knowledge and amplify concerns and priorities of community partners through non-academic settings.
KW - Indigenous knowledges
KW - Indigenous peoples
KW - Indigenous research methods
KW - co-produce
KW - food sovereignty
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105004593629
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105004593629#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1139/as-2024-0063
DO - 10.1139/as-2024-0063
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105004593629
SN - 2368-7460
VL - 11
JO - Arctic Science
JF - Arctic Science
ER -