Making knowledge inclusive? Improving how we do research with Indigenous and local communities

More and more, global challenges like climate change are being felt locally, and Indigenous peoples are often the most vulnerable. Scientists who work on methods to adapt to climate change often want to include Indigenous and local people in their research, but this can be a challenge for a multitude of reasons. Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 researcher Roxana Roos set out to uncover the most important barriers to the participation of local and Indigenous communities. She just published her results: 鈥淭here is much room for improvement when it comes to involving local knowledge and perspectives.鈥

Arctic case study community in Uummannaq, Greenland. Photo: Jean-Michel Huctin

The inclusion of the perspectives of Indigenous and local people when developing ways to respond to societal challenges is increasingly the norm in the scientific world. 鈥淔or response strategies to be effective, communities need to be involved in their development,鈥 explains Roos, a senior researcher at the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development and the 木瓜福利影视 of Bergen. This is true for a whole range of topics, from social justice to climate adaptation. But getting local communities involved in research by 鈥榦utsiders鈥 can be difficult. For her , Roos interviewed several researchers who work with local communities, in different fields of research around the globe, about the challenges they face. 鈥淚 discovered that, while these researchers work on completely different topics and in different continents, they often run into the same issues.鈥

Diverse challenges

Roos divided these issues into eight categories. 鈥淭ime and money can be a limiting factor for researchers, who often don鈥檛 have the opportunity to foster a relation of mutual trust with locals as a result.鈥 Additionally, local communities often don鈥檛 see the relevance of the research to their daily lives and may have negative past experiences with scientists. 鈥淪ome Indigenous peoples have seen foreign researchers come to their community, ask questions, collect data and leave, giving nothing back to the community while earning a salary for it.鈥 Furthermore, communities may wish to be paid for their participation, which can lead to funding issues.

Some Indigenous peoples have seen foreign researchers come to their community, ask questions, collect data and leave, giving nothing back to the community while earning a salary for it.

Cultural differences can also be an important barrier. Roos: 鈥淚n some cultures, researchers may only be able to speak to community members of a specific gender, or local elders.鈥 Language barriers also play a role. 鈥淩esearchers are often dependent on interpreters, disrupting the flow of conversation.鈥 Finally, indigenous knowledge and perspectives are often not accepted by the Western scientific establishment. 鈥淚ndigenous theories and methods and work by indigenous researchers should not be dismissed,鈥 says Roos.

Dealing with challenges as part of the scientific method

Analysis of scientific papers written by the researchers Roos spoke to showed that they hardly write about the challenges they face. This results in neither local participants nor other readers of these texts being able to critically reflect about the challenges arising during research and the strategies used to deal with them. Roos recommends that researchers start discussing the challenges they face in their articles. 鈥淩ecognizing and dealing with these challenges is part of the scientific process. This way, researchers can learn from each other鈥檚 experiences and advance science together鈥.

Based on the experiences of her interviewees, Roos also gives suggestions on how to deal with the eight specific challenges. These are characterized by an overarching theme: 鈥淲hat鈥檚 most important is to involve local people from the start, letting them have an equal say and properly valuing their knowledge and perspectives as valuable to science.鈥

Publication

Roos, R. (2024). . Humanities and Social Sciences Communications11(1), 1-11.