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Coming full circle: Indigenous knowledge & climate futures

鈥淭he only way to appropriately understand Indigenous Knowledge Systems or Indigenous Knowledges is to establish meaningful relationships with Indigenous peoples on their own terms.鈥 - Deborah McGregor

EUC Prof Deborah McGregor
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What is Indigenous knowledge and how does it contribute to the achievement of UN鈥檚 Sustainable Development Goal on climate action? How can the integration of Indigenous knowledge contribute to climate change futures? What is the Indigenous climate strategy?

Throughout her career, has focused her research and teaching on Indigenous knowledge systems and their applications in diverse contexts -- including water and environmental governance, environmental justice, forest policy and management, and sustainable development. An Anishinaabe from Whitefish River First Nation, Ontario, her understanding of Indigenous ways of knowing has been informed by lived experience while living and working on Anishinabek territories.

鈥淎nishinaabe research is a form of reclaiming our stories and knowledge through personal transformation while in the pursuit of knowledge. As Anishinaabe people, we have our own worldviews, philosophies, ways of being, and research traditions that account for our relationships and existence in the world,鈥 says McGregor.

As , McGregor鈥檚 multidimensional research has shared the 鈥淚ndigenous climate change futures鈥 desired by Elders, youth and other knowledge holders through authored and edited books, peer-reviewed journal articles, workshops, podcasts, videos, and numerous presentations in Canada and abroad.

In 2021, McGregor was also appointed as the inaugural director of 91亚色鈥檚 Centre for Indigenous Knowledges and Languages (CIKL). The Centre hosts Indigenous and non-Indigenous researchers and students engaged in these areas of scholarship and facilitates knowledge production and dissemination centered on Indigenous knowledges, languages, practices, and ways of being.

鈥淐IKL has offered a generative space within and beyond 91亚色 to advance Indigenous scholarship, research theories, methodologies and practices supporting a keen understanding of the goals and aspirations of Indigenous Peoples. The Centre has also fostered collaborations and partnerships with Indigenous Peoples and others in creating an ethical space for dialogue on how research relationships can be envisioned, negotiated, and practised in support of Indigenous futurities,鈥 notes McGregor.

Besides the IEJ project, McGregor holds a SSHRC Insight Grant on with Lisa Myers and Alan Corbiere. The project defines what it means to "live well" from a self-determined Indigenous perspective and focuses on the Anishinabek concept of聽mino-mnaamodzawin聽(well-being with all life) as a framework for envisioning Indigenous-derived climate futures for the benefit of not only Indigenous peoples but of all society and the natural world.

McGregor is part of a SSHRC Partnership Grant on led by Robin Roth from University of Guelph. The project critically investigates the state of conservation practice in Canada and supports efforts to advance Indigenous-led conservation in the spirit of reconciliation and decolonization. She serves as co-lead of the project supporting the establishment of Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas and the transformation of existing protected areas.

Conservation through Reconciliation partnership

In 2022, SSHRC initiated a digital marketing campaign on  featuring social sciences and humanities researchers investigating and shedding light on topics of concern to Canadians -- including economic vulnerability, climate change and environment, pandemic and wellness, reconciliation and cybersecurity, and how their research is leading to solutions and contributing to shaping a positive future for Canadians and the world. McGregor鈥檚 compelling work on is recognized for providing the space needed to mobilize Indigenous knowledge so they can advocate for a self-determined climate future.

In 2023, EUC co-hosted a keynote panel on "" with Candis Callison, Naomi Klein and Deborah McGregor as part of Congress 2023. As a champion of Indigenous knowledge systems (IKS), McGregor emphasizes that Indigenous knowledge is not just 鈥渒nowledge鈥 but a way of life, something that must be 鈥渓ived鈥 in order to be understood.聽 Accordingly, appropriate and effective inclusion of Indigenous knowledge requires recognition of the systems that support it, which in turn necessitates support for Indigenous self-determination.

Indigenous Knowing & Climate Futures panel

In a recent event at Michigan State University (MSU)鈥檚 Amplify STEM  Initiative 2024, McGregor further spoke on focusing on incorporating Indigenous peoples鈥 longstanding knowledge systems and perspectives into climate change governance and promoting environmental justice. She discussed the integration of Indigenous knowledge in various fields, such as environmental and water governance, highlighting how Indigenous perspectives can provide unique and sustainable solutions.

Reflecting on her work experiences and participation in global climate assessments, she emphasizes the importance of land acknowledgments (鈥渦nderstanding what is happening, what the earth is trying to tell us, and listening to the language of the land itself鈥) and advocates for the involvement of Indigenous voices and knowledge in global assessments and policymaking processes to create more effective and unbiased solutions.

An alternative vision for sustainable futures involves self-determined Indigenous environmental justice. It builds upon a distinct understanding of Indigenous environmental justice which asserts that the components necessary for Indigenous environmental justice are Indigenous knowledge systems, legal orders, and conceptions of justice that have existed for thousands of years. - Deborah McGregor

indigenous poster with a girl on side

Further sharing her experience contributing to environmental assessments and the challenges posed by some of their criteria prioritizing other types of research over Indigenous knowledge, she notes that 鈥渢his exclusion results in significant gaps in understanding and addressing climate change impacts on Indigenous communities. She observes that only a few Indigenous led climate strategies have been implemented in Canada, primarily by the Assembly of First Nation (AFN), Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, and AFN-BC.

鈥淗umans are the cause of climate change while they also hold the key to changing the course of destruction we all face. We need to turn to the natural world for guidance,鈥 she adds. In discussing Indigenous climate futures, she prompts us to consider these questions: 鈥淒o we love our future generations? How will our work benefit future generations? What kind of ancestors will we be?鈥

for our future poster

McGregor has written widely about Indigenous Knowledge Systems and environmentalism in Canadian and international publications. She has published 2 co-edited books, 2 journal special issues, 85 refereed articles and book chapters, 6 peer reviewed reports, and 55 non-refereed publications (conference proceedings, manuals, book reviews, articles) and 82 commissioned research publications. Recently, she was a co-author of that draws on Indigenous knowledge, perspectives and experiences and explores multidimensional and intersecting aspects of climate change impacts and adaptation.

This July 2024, McGregor will be starting her new post as 鈥痑t the University of Calgary. As the CERC in Indigenous Ways of Climate and Water Sustainability for Planetary Health and Well-being,鈥疢cGregor will generate understanding of, and build support for, Indigenous leadership in Earth-based reconciliation and justice, focusing on climate change as the overriding symptom of the planetary health crisis. Her CERC research program will include the creation of unique, co-developed and co-generated knowledge aimed at identifying solutions that promote planetary well-being and justice, for people and for all life.

In accepting the award, McGregor resolves not to simply import existing work to a new context. 鈥淚 am open to sharing my experience from working around the Great Lakes in a way that other people might want to hear, find useful, learn from, and hopefully that sharing leads to are mutually beneficial and reciprocal relationships,鈥 she remarks.

We would like to say Chi-miigwech (a big thank you) to Professor Deborah McGregor for her research and teachings at 91亚色! She has also been designated as Distinguished Fellow to the Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies at 91亚色. We wish her all the best in her future endeavours at the University of Calgary while continuing her collaboration with folks at 91亚色 and other institutions with whom she has worked with throughout the years!