Abstract

First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one example, many communities have been living under boil water advisories for decades, but government interventions to date have had limited impact. This paper examines the importance of using Indigenous research methodologies to address current water issues affecting First Nations. The work is part of larger project applying decolonizing methodologies to Indigenous water governance. Because Indigenous epistemologies are a central component of Indigenous research methods, our analysis begins with presenting a theoretical framework for understanding Indigenous water relations. We then consider three cases of innovative Indigenous research initiatives that demonstrate how water research and policy initiatives can adopt a more Indigenous-centered approach in practice. Cases include (1) an Indigenous Community-Based Health Research Lab that follows a two-eyed seeing philosophy (Saskatchewan); (2) water policy research that uses collective knowledge sharing frameworks to facilitate respectful, non-extractive conversations among Elders and traditional knowledge holders (Ontario); and (3) a long-term community-based research initiative on decolonizing water that is practicing reciprocal learning methodologies (British Columbia, Alberta). By establishing new water governance frameworks informed by Indigenous research methods, the authors hope to promote innovative, adaptable solutions, rooted in Indigenous epistemologies.

Highlights

  • Water governance challenges are typically framed as technology, infrastructure, or funding problems, but deeper analysis often reveals that inequitable resource distribution, sociopolitical and governance challenges are the more fundamental issues [4,5]

  • This paper examines a gap in our understanding of how Indigenous research methodologies can be applied to Indigenous water governance problems

  • We present three case studies that demonstrate how Indigenous research methodologies are being critically applied to current water governance challenges in Canada

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Summary

Introduction

Water governance challenges are typically framed as technology, infrastructure, or funding problems, but deeper analysis often reveals that inequitable resource distribution, sociopolitical and governance challenges are the more fundamental issues [4,5]. Nations communities are forced to treat water sources, or are altogether lacking clean water access. Federal or provincial governance bodies have delegated water management responsibility to communities, based on the premise that local communities are well positioned to understand and address local water management challenges. In this case, devolution of management authority has occurred as an unfunded mandate, since many local communities lack the financial and technical resources, as well as the governance capacity required to fully provide community water needs [7,8,15,16,17]

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