The Future of Indigenous Rights and Responsibilities: Ancestral governance, environmental stewardship, language revival, and cultural vibrancy.
Lead Research Organisation:
UNIVERSITY OF EXETER
Department Name: History
Abstract
The project focuses on Indigenous rights and priorities. Working in the ancestral territories of the K'omox, Pentlatch, and E'iksan (Vancouver Island, Canada) and Maori (Aotearoa, New Zealand), the project will do in-depth work with ancestral leadership, place based origin stories, environmental stewardship, cultural societies, dance groups and language specialists. It will address four of the most pressing issues for the local Indigenous communities: 1) the renewal of ancestral governance, 2) environmental stewardship, 3) language revival, and 4) cultural revitalisation. The project takes practical approaches to raise community awareness of customary rights and responsibilities to the land, ocean, and ecosystems. It will help map family relations, reconnecting community members with ancestral knowledge and trace their ties to different places and kinships. This work is decolonisation in practice, led by local needs and priorities. It is designed to help overcome knowledge lost to many community members though colonisation and cultural genocide, as documented in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Reports 2015. This project builds on the team members' independent work on decolonisation, cultural renewal and healing, and their international networks. The project will support an ongoing relationship of cultural exchange between Vancouver Island and Aotearoa. Working across cultures provides different models for cultural and language renewal, leadership and governance, and strategies to negotiate Indigenous-settler relationships. In Aotearoa, UNDRIP has not only been adopted into law, but it is now being measured against attainment goals, making it a step ahead of Canada that adopted UNDRIP in 2019.
Publications

Onciul B
(2024)
Heritages of (de)colonialism: Reflections from the Pacific Northwest Coast, Canada
in American Anthropologist

Onciul B
(2024)
The critical potential of heritage for Indigenous rights in the Anthropocene
in International Journal of Heritage Studies

Wedlidi Speck
(2023)
The E'ik?s?n "People of the Sun"
Description | Future Leaders Fellowship |
Amount | £1,530,334 (GBP) |
Funding ID | MR/X034186/1 |
Organisation | United Kingdom Research and Innovation |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 02/2025 |
End | 02/2029 |
Description | VUW, Aotearoa New Zealand Namala Partnership |
Organisation | Victoria University of Wellington |
Country | New Zealand |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | The Canada based project team are hosting a VUW team member in Canada for 10 days. We are creating an rich international community engagement and knowledge exchange. |
Collaborator Contribution | VUW is hosting one of the Co-Is and will be hosting the international team in Aotearoa New Zealand as part of the community engagement and cultural exchange |
Impact | Multidisciplinary and multi-cultural, bringing together Matauranga Maori, Kwakwakwa'wakw knowledge, E'ik?s?n knowledge, Pent'latch knowledge, and heritage and museology. |
Start Year | 2023 |
Description | MOA UBC Vancouver Talk |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
Results and Impact | The talk was for ~20 Post Graduate Students studying ANTH 518 Anthropology Museum Methods at the University of British Columbia, Canada. The research talk sparked a lot of interest, questions and follow-on inquires for opportunities and connections. The university reported that the students were inspired by the future focused nature of the research projects and benefited from learning about the engaged methodological approaches. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |