Ottawa needs to review research funding criteria through the Tri-council agencies to ensure all projects affecting Indigenous populations have their consent and support, says a House of Commons committee report.
The federal government also needs to examine the representation of Indigenous language holders on funding review panels and work with Indigenous communities to support the appropriate evaluation of applications for research funding that affects Indigenous communities, the report says.
The report, Incorporating Indigenous Knowledge and Science in Canadian Research and Policy Development, is by the 12-member Standing Committee on Science and Research, and was chaired by Valerie Bradford, Liberal MP for Kitchener South-Hespeler, Ontario.
“Rather than integrating Indigenous knowledge and science into Canadian research and policy development, organizations and governments should focus on supporting such concepts as parallel paths, two-eyed seeing, ethical space, braiding and weaving as ways to show how knowledge systems of equal prominence and value can support and strengthen decision-making processes,” some witnesses told the committee.
Some common elements of Indigenous knowledge systems include the involvement of Indigenous knowledge holders, focusing on relationships, respect for the world and those within it, and the use of Indigenous languages, the report says.
Other witnesses cautioned against defining a knowledge system based on membership in a specific cultural or ethnic group, and they emphasized the universal nature of knowledge.
Witnesses provided many examples of Indigenous knowledge and science, both historically and currently in practice, including:
Actions taken by Tri-agency, government departments and other organizations
In a written submission, the Tri-agency granting councils outlined that in response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Call to Action 65, the granting councils have pursued coordinated action to support Indigenous research and education.
Environment and Climate Change Canada has established the Indigenous Science Division, which “is meant to advance and consider Indigenous knowledge systems at the same time as we progress in looking at Western science.”
Crown-Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada provided examples of how the department engages with Indigenous peoples and knowledge, including:
Canada’s Office of the Chief Science Advisor (OCSA) in collaboration with federal departments, has developed the Indigenous-Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (I-STEM) cluster, a pan-government initiative to, in the words of Chief Science Advisor Mona Nemer, “facilitate the recruitment of Indigenous scientists and scholars, but also to facilitate the understanding of culturally sensitive issues and how to best liaise with the community.”
The OCSA has also appointed an Indigenous scholar from the University of Manitoba as a researcher in residence to help advise the office on how to include consideration of Indigenous knowledge into their policies, such as their approach to open science.
The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada has a similar position for a scholar in residence to establish greater Indigenous representation and provide advice to senior management.
Michael DeGagné, president and CEO of Indspire, highlighted their model, which funds Indigenous college, university and trade students, and has led to an increased understanding of when and how often Indigenous knowledge is incorporated into post-secondary education programs.
In Quebec, the École d’études autochtones within the Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue is a “unique multidisciplinary school” that develops programs and research projects “dictated by the Indigenous partners we have in the jurisdictions or communities, and we conduct them with Indigenous people.”
A written submission to the committee by the Canadian Brain Research Strategy outlined their development of an Indigenous Knowledge Holders Group and Indigenous outreach and engagement activities to bring together Indigenous leaders to contribute to the strategy.
Report makes 15 recommendations to federal government
The report’s 15 recommendations also included that the federal government:
The Bloc Québécois, in a separate supplementary report, said certain recommendations in the committee’s report raise serious concerns about academic freedom.
The Bloc Québécois said it believes the committee should not recommend that the federal government develop science policies based on grounds of discrimination, such as race, skin color, sex, gender identity or expression, pregnancy, sexual orientation, marital status or age.
“The only criteria that should guide the awarding of research grants must be the quality and relevance of the research projects. It is not the scientists or researchers who should be evaluated, but their research proposals,” says the Bloc Québécois report.
Also, the report says, the use by the federal government of its spending power is an intrusion into an area of exclusive jurisdiction of Quebec and the provinces.
While the government can fund scientific research, it has no power to dictate conditions that influence the educational environment and academic activities, the report says. “Federal funding of scientific research should respect the laws of Quebec, the principle of academic freedom and university autonomy.”
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