6 research outputs found
Cultural Stewardship Accountability of Seed Bank Institutions for Indigenous Knowledge
A growing emphasis among seed banks in Australia and globally is the collection of seed and information associated with wild crop relatives of food and fodder crops. This is part of scientific efforts to store and document plant traits that may prove useful to deal with risks to food and bio security in the face of global climate changes. This has implications for indigenous communities because of the risk that indigenous knowledge may be collected and included as ‘data’ rather than as knowledge with significant cultural tethering. This articl provides a theoretical context for institutional seed banks to engage with indigenous people and specify indigenous knowledge stewardship accountability. This should help seed banks to operate with sensitivity to cultural wellbeing and minimise the risks from failure to satisfy accountability for indigenous knowledge stewardship. The article identifies four interrelated dimensions of indigenous knowledge stewardship, and identifies a tentative process for institutions to adapt this to indigenous knowledge stewardship strategy and practice. The process for realising indigenous knowledge stewardship accountability is the subject of further research
The potential for improved water management using a legal social contract
This review examines the proposed social contract to improve water management in the Canterbury
Region of New Zealand. This contract defines expectations of resource access and use, forming a
boundary of responsibility between entitlement holder and society. The type of expectations may
range from community wellbeing to freedom of private interests. In effect, this creates a tension
between other regarding action for resource stewardship and the freedom to self-manage a
resource entitlement with minimal accountability. The tension is embedded in western liberal legal
frameworks that simultaneously seek enforcement of stewardship obligations while protecting the
freedom of private interests in resources. In Canterbury a collaborative resource management
strategy for water, supporting a legal social contract shows the tension in practice.This research was carried out using an Endeavour Research Fellowship, an Australian
Government initiative administered by the Department of Science, Innovation and
Workplace Relations
Cultural Stewardship Accountability of Seed Bank Institutions for Indigenous Knowledge
A growing emphasis among seed banks in Australia and globally is the collection of seed and information associated with wild crop relatives of food and fodder crops. This is part of scientific efforts to store and document plant traits that may prove useful to deal with risks to food and bio security in the face of global climate changes. This has implications for indigenous communities because of the risk that indigenous knowledge may be collected and included as ‘data’ rather than as knowledge with significant cultural tethering. This articl provides a theoretical context for institutional seed banks to engage with indigenous people and specify indigenous knowledge stewardship accountability. This should help seed banks to operate with sensitivity to cultural wellbeing and minimise the risks from failure to satisfy accountability for indigenous knowledge stewardship. The article identifies four interrelated dimensions of indigenous knowledge stewardship, and identifies a tentative process for institutions to adapt this to indigenous knowledge stewardship strategy and practice. The process for realising indigenous knowledge stewardship accountability is the subject of further research