Culture, Community, and Collaboration: New Directions for Protecting Indigenous Heritage
2014, Arts + Culture
The (IPinCH) project is the first-ever recipient of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) Partnership Award. In recognition of this award, President Petter is sponsoring a special presentation by George Nicholas, Director of the IPinCH project.
Questions about who owns or has the right to benefit from Indigenous heritage are at the core of ongoing political, economic, and ethical debates taking place at local, national, and international levels. When it comes to research in this area, Indigenous peoples have typically had little say in how studies related to their heritage are managed. Increasingly though, efforts are being made to decolonize research practices by fostering more equitable relationships between researchers and Indigenous peoples, based on mutual trust and collaboration.
In this presentation George Nicholas reviews debates over the ownership of Indigenous heritage and provides examples of new research practices that are both more ethical and more effective. These collaborative research models, in which the community leads the research, highlight important new directions in protecting Indigenous heritage.
7:00 p.m. (PT)
515 West Hastings Street, Room 1400
We respectfully acknowledge that this event takes place on the Unceded, Traditional, Ancestral Territories of the S廎硬x戔w繳7mesh, slilwta优, and x妢m庛k妢ym First Nations.
Dr. George Nicholas
Dr. George Nicholas is a professor of archeology at 間眅埶AV who has worked for more than 20 years with Indigenous peoples in British Columbia and elsewhere. He is the Director of project, an international initiative that focuses on the rights, values, and responsibilities of material culture, cultural knowledge, and the practice of heritage research.