Of course, data can never fully represent reality”: Assessing the relationship between “indigenous data” and “indigenous knowledge,” “traditional ecological knowledge,” and “traditional knowledge

Marisa Elena Duarte, Morgan Vigil-Hayes, Sandra Littletree, Miranda Belarde-Lewis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Multiple terms describe Indigenous peoples’ creative expressions, including “Indigenous knowledge” (IK), “traditional ecological knowledge” (TEK), “traditional knowledge” (TK), and increasingly, “Indigenous data” (ID). Variation in terms contributes to disciplinary divides, challenges in organizing and fijinding prior studies about Indigenous peoples’ creative expressions, and intellectually divergent chains of reference. The authors applied a decolonial, digital, feminist, ethics-of-care approach to citation analysis of records about Indigenous peoples knowledge and data, including network analyses of author-generated keywords and research areas, and content analysis of peer-reviewed studies about ID. Results reveal ambiguous uses of the term “Indigenous data”; the influence of ecology and environmental studies in research areas and topics associated with IK, TEK, and TK; and the influence of public administration and governance studies in research areas and topics associated with ID studies. Researchers of ID would benefijit from applying a more nuanced and robust vocabulary, one informed by studies of IK, TEK, and TK. Researchers of TEK and TK would benefijit from the more people-centered approaches of IK. Researchers and systems designers who work with data sets can practice relational accountability by centering the Indigenous peoples from whom observations are sourced, combining narrative methodologies with computational methods to sustain the holism favored by Indigenous science and the relationality of Indigenous peoples.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)163-178
Number of pages16
JournalHuman biology
Volume91
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 1 2019

Keywords

  • Data science
  • Indigenous data sovereignty
  • Indigenous knowledge
  • Informatics
  • Information science
  • Traditional ecological knowledge
  • Traditional knowledge

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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