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Before we begin…

Before we begin…. Integrating Historical Secwepemc Knowledge with Contemporary Science. Meeting our aboriginal neighbours again – for the first time First United Church, Salmon Arm, BC Sept. 22, 2012 Warren Bell Past Founding President WA:TER – Wetland Alliance: The Ecological Response.

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Before we begin…

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  1. Before we begin…

  2. Integrating Historical Secwepemc Knowledge with Contemporary Science Meeting our aboriginal neighbours again – for the first time First United Church, Salmon Arm, BC Sept. 22, 2012 Warren Bell Past Founding President WA:TER – Wetland Alliance: The Ecological Response

  3. Thesis: Western industrial science has lost its way. Aboriginal wisdom can show us the way home.

  4. The European explorers who first visited the Northwest Coast of North America assumed that the entire region was virtually untouched wilderness whose occupants used the land only minimally, hunting and gathering shoots, roots, and berries that were peripheral to a diet and culture focused on salmon. Colonizers who followed the explorers used these claims to justify the displacement of Native groups from their lands. Scholars now understand, however, that Northwest Coast peoples were actively cultivating plants well before their first contact with Europeans.

  5. In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue….

  6. How do we use knowledge?

  7. Purposes for gathering knowledge • Aboriginal (50,000 years): • Survival • Sustaining resources • Respect/reverence for natural world • Western industrial society (260 years): • Production of “goods” or “products” (GDP) • Monetary gain • Curiosity about the world

  8. How does the industrial world rate knowledge?

  9. 1901

  10. Nobel Prizes = the “pinnacle” of Western scientific knowledge • Physics • Chemistry • Medicine • Literature • Peace • Economic sciences

  11. What’s not recognized?

  12. No award for knowledge of the natural world, or of the human-environmental interface • All Biological sciences • Environmental science • Food and agricultural science • Forestry • Climatology • Atmospheric, water, soil sciences • Ecosystem valuation • Ethnobotany!

  13. No award for knowledge of human conduct or behaviour • All social or psychological sciences • Psychology • Sociology • Anthropology • History • Political science • Linguistics • Ethnobotany!

  14. No award for knowledge of ethics, moral judgement or values • Bioethics • Ethics • “Honesty” studies • “Objectivity” studies • “Integrity” studies • “Carefulness” studies • “Openness” or “transparency” studies

  15. Somebody noticed this a few years ago….

  16. 1980

  17. “The Right Livelihood Award evolved from Jakob von Uexküll's opinion that the Nobel Prizes were relatively narrow in scope and usually recognised the work of citizens in industrialized countries. Uexküll first approached the Nobel Foundation with the suggestion that it establish two new awards, one for ecology and one relevant to the lives of the poor majority of the world's population. He offered to contribute financially but his proposal was turned down.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_Livelihood_Award

  18. Percy and Louise Schmeiser Maude Barlow David Suzuki

  19. 1993 – sisters Mary and Carrie Dann of the Western Shoshone people "...for exemplary courage and perseverance in asserting the rights of indigenous people to their land." “Western Shoshone land - our Mother Earth - is not for sale”

  20. But now there’s a new player… The modern (multinational) corporation

  21. “Global Inc. – An atlas of the multinational corporation” Gabel/BrunerThe New Press 2003

  22. Corporations (100 years) use knowledge to: • Argue the case for their exploitative actions • Defeat critics • Satisfy government regulations • Make money for shareholders

  23. How corporations use knowledge

  24. “There are no base files for this project as it is a Greenfield project.” Translation: “We have no real clue how this will actually work because we’re building this in untouched wilderness.”

  25. How “civil society” uses knowledge to address corporate actions

  26. Ecosystem valuation

  27. $$$$$$$$

  28. Ecological Footprint(Wackernagel and Rees) “The amount of biologically productive land and sea area necessary to supply the resources a human population consumes, and to assimilate associated waste.”

  29. http://www.footprintnetwork.org/en/index.php/GFN/

  30. We can no longer afford careless development!

  31. Closer to home…

  32. “No archaeological sites were identified within the proposed development area…”

  33. The back story… • No artifacts on the lower south side of the river because First Nations would not have built or stayed where it flooded regularly • There was evidence of FN presence (40-50 year old culturally modified trees) but this didn’t have to be described, by statute, as “archeological evidence” • Proponent unwilling at first to work with FN, and unwilling to disseminate the study to any other parties (eventually agreed to do so)

  34. Getting closer to using knowledge in a new way

  35. And dozens of photos….

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