A goanna is a kind of Australian monitor lizard that can grow up to 1.7 metres in length. However, such dinosaurian dimensions are no protection against the lethal consequences of eating a particular kind of cane toad that is spreading throughout tropical Australia and decimating or even obliterating local lizard populations.
But all is not lost. A recent involved catching the goannas and exposing them to smaller, unpleasant-tasting but non-lethal toads so they acquired an aversion to them and, thereby, learned to avoid the deadly ones, too. Tracking their survival rates, via radio transmitters attached to their bodies, indicates that the technique has great promise: by the end of the study, 56 per cent of trained lizards had lived beyond 110 days, compared with only 3 per cent of untrained lizards.
To carry out the project, a team of researchers based primarily at the University of Sydney joined forces with rangers from the Balanggarra Aboriginal Corporation, which administers land on behalf of the Balanggarra People at the northern tip of Western Australia. The rangers, it turned out, could spot the lizards at a greater distance than the Sydney researchers could. That was particularly true for the âshyerâ goannas, which proved to be better learners and, therefore, crucial to the success of the project. These tended to hide in the long grass, invisible to the academics.

The resulting , âSharper eyes see shyer lizards: Collaboration with Indigenous peoples can alter the outcome of conservation researchâ, published in March in Conservation Letters, concludes that âIndigenous collaboration is central to this conservation interventionâ â which is now being implemented on a larger scale
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A similar lesson is suggested by a study from the other side of world, which examined ways to mitigate the effects of climate change on the basin of the NÀÀtÀmö river in Finnish Lapland, and to restore habitats that had been damaged by dredging, forestry, boat access and other human impacts between 1950 and 1980.
The project incorporated input from teams of SĂĄmi people â the original inhabitants of Lapland. The research drew on their âtraditional knowledge observations of the basin, including weather and star lore eventsâ to âpoint to sites and drivers of change and their implications for salmon in the context of climate changeâ, according to a , âHow traditional knowledge comes to matter in Atlantic salmon governance in Norway and Finlandâ, published in December in the journal Arctic.Ìę
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The SĂĄmi were also given digital cameras, and became the first people to report the arrival in the basin of a beetle species usually found further south. This observation "was then published in peer-reviewed science journals, leading to the establishment of visual-optic communal histories as a method to detect change in a subarctic basinâ. The overall result of âIndigenous participation at all levelsâ of the project was âa concrete impact on sustainabilityâ, the paper says.
George Nicholas, professor of archaeology at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, sees evidence of a wider trend. In a February in The Conversation, provocatively titled âItâs taken thousands of years, but Western science is finally catching up to traditional knowledgeâ, Nicholas cites the excitement greeting recent research showing that kites and falcons intentionally carry and drop burning sticks to spread fires and flush out insects, rodents and reptiles â something the Indigenous peoples of northern Australia have known about for thousands of years.
âEmploying traditional knowledge-based observations and explanations within multiple working hypotheses ensures consideration of a variety of predictive, interpretive or explanatory possibilities not constrained by Western expectation or logic," he writes. "And hypotheses incorporating traditional knowledge-based information can lead the way toward unanticipated insights.â
Traditional knowledge, the article adds, has much to teach us on topics ranging from âmedicinal properties of plants and insights into the value of biological diversity to caribou migration patterns and the effects of intentional burning of the landscape to manage particular resourcesâ. Asked by ÌÇĐÄVlog about the implications for teaching, Nicholas mentions âopportunities for side-by-side approachesâ, involving both traditional and Western knowledge â notably within âwildlife biology or ecology coursesâ.
Such incorporation of Indigenous knowledge into mainstream research and teaching is very high on the agenda in countries whose Indigenous peoples suffered at the hands of Western settlers. In Canada, the epicentre of the movement, the touchstone is the landmark, seven-year investigation by Canadaâs Truth and Reconciliation Commission into the history and impact of the countryâs notorious system of âIndian residential schoolsâ. These were government-funded and church-run boarding schools that, until the 1990s, sought to forcibly assimilate Indigenous people into the Canadian mainstream by cutting them off from their own culture, in a brutal process that the commission concluded in its 2015 report amounted to âcultural genocideâ. Ontarioâs Algoma University is actually on the site of , and incorporates a cemetery containing the graves of more than 100 students and staff from the school.
The commission report includes 94 ââ regarding Canadaâs relationship with its Indigenous people. As part of this, Nicholas argues that university curricula must be indigenised to âmake the larger population aware of the colonial history of the land, of the disenfranchisement of the first peoples and what ensuedâ.
But some advocates argue for indigenisation to go much further. They call for a wholesale blending of âIndigenous knowledgeâ into teaching curricula and the conceptual frameworks informing research â and not only in the âobviousâ subjects that are the frequent focus of demands for curricula to be diversified and âdecolonisedâ, such as history, literature or the visual arts, but also the social and even the natural sciences.
Are such goals realistic? Are they wise? And will they achieve their desired goal of redressing historical injustice and boosting the status of Indigenous peoples?
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One obvious issue of social justice afflicting Indigenous populations is higher education admission rates. In New Zealand, says Joanna Kidman, an associate professor in the Faculty of Education at Victoria University of Wellington, âMÄori tertiary student enrolments have been a focus for successive governments and all New Zealand universities have policies and support services in place for MÄori studentsâ. Yet managed to meet the enrolment targets and pass rates for 2018 set by New Zealandâs Tertiary Education Commission in 2012.
One reason that has been suggested for the low participation of Indigenous students in higher education is the lack of reference to their cultures in university teaching and research. For Kidman, the key is to increase the proportion of MÄori academics â which is currently less than 5 per cent of the total in New Zealand. As a result, she says, curricular change has so far been âpatchy and very slowâ, with medical schools, for instance, still âvery entrenched in Western medicineâ. Yet âincreasingly, where PÄkehÄ [non-MÄori] scientists are working in the field in MÄori communities, theyâre starting to involve MÄori in their teams or labs, and that has triggered a slow kind of transformation but potentially a very exciting oneâ.
Moreover, in research, there are âsmall numbersâ of MÄori scientists who are adopting approaches deriving from MÄori knowledge and worldviews in their fieldwork, Kidman says. One example is Dan Hikuroa, an earth scientist and senior lecturer in MÄori studies at the University of Auckland, who brings on the natural world to bear on his study of rivers. Another is Pauline Harris, an astrophysicist and senior lecturer in science in society at Victoria University of Wellington, who is âdedicated to revitalising in her academic teaching and researchâ.

Meanwhile, all incoming students to Australiaâs La Trobe University must take a one-hour module on Indigenous history, culture and customs, known as Wominjeka (or Welcome). The university has also introduced a and entry pathway for Indigenous school students, âfocused on cultural immersion, peer mentoring and an academic boot campâ, according to Andrew Harvey, director of the universityâs Centre for ÌÇĐÄVlog Equity and Diversity Research. And the School of Education employs âan Indigenous practitioner in residenceâ, who âworks part-time in the community and part-time at the university, overseeing Indigenous subjects and participating in broader subject design and supporting other lecturersâ.
The university seeks to promote what Harvey calls âinclusive excellenceâ, whereby âthe presence of Indigenous perspectives across all disciplines can enable non-Indigenous students to be challenged, to question their assumptions and to experience deeper learning through rich conversationsâ.
In Canada, meanwhile, issues around Indigenous communities have been âa priority for over 10 yearsâ, says Paul Davidson, president of Universities Canada. But he admits that institutional minds were concentrated by the Truth and Reconciliation Committeeâs calls to action, and he believes that universities recognise âtheir unique responsibility in the reconciliation processâ. Questions around access are âvery urgentâ, given that the Indigenous population is growing at three times the national average, while proportions going to university are only a third as high. And in research, too, things are starting to change. Universities are rethinking the old models of research on Indigenous communities â which involved âgoing up North for the summerâ and never sharing any of the knowledge generated â and are now examining how to âwork in partnerships in a way that is sustainableâ. Nonetheless, Davidson acknowledges, âthe heavy lifting is still ahead of usâ.
One institution that is arguably ahead of the curve is the University of Toronto. According to Jonathan Hamilton-Diabo, its director of Indigenous initiatives, the institution now has âa rather robust Indigenous storyâ. In response to the 94 calls for action, a steering committee delivered a report in early 2017 requiring that all major events at the university include a statement acknowledging that the campus is located on what had been â as the statement puts it â âthe traditional land of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca and, most recently, the Mississaugas of the Credit Riverâ.ÌęMoreover, Hamilton-Diabo and an Indigenous personal librarian were both appointed as part of a wider push to employ more Indigenous faculty. Mentoring programmes offer potential Indigenous students a taste of life on campus. And a new Indigenous âhubâ has been created, featuring a medicine garden and âthe opportunity to meet with Elders and traditional teachers for support, guidance and teachingsâ.
Toronto had also responded to specific calls to action by integrating (or planning to integrate) more Indigenous material into courses on social work, nursing, law, education and journalism. Asked about other disciplines, Hamilton-Diabo responds that the universityâs Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering has appointed a special adviser to its dean. Jason Bazylak, an associate professor in the teaching stream of mechanical engineering, will be âassisting with the implementation of strategies for incorporating Indigenous content into the curriculumâ, Hamilton-Diabo says. âThus far, first-year design projects include engineering challenges related to Indigenous communities.â
Given that Indigenous thought and philosophy fall outside âa Westernised ideological and methodological frameworkâ, the university needs to find ways of âcombining [the two traditions] in ways that are synergisticâ and could expose âthe limitations of Westernised scientific methodologyâ.
On the implications for medicine â where Toronto degrees now include âone full course-worth of content focused in Indigenous healthâ â Hamilton-Diabo points to the example of an independent community health centre in Toronto âwhere one can receive pharmaceutical-based medical care for diabetes, [plus mainstream services in] dentistry and counselling, while also having the option to engage with traditional approaches to healingâ. These include âfasting ceremoniesâ, âplant-based medicinesâ and a âsweat lodgeâ: a hut in which Elders carry out purification ceremonies.

Meanwhile, the University of Alberta last November that it was eliminating a quota system that limited to just five the number of Indigenous applicants admitted to its medical degree via its âIndigenous Health Initiatives Programâ. From autumn 2020, the school â which admits 165 students a year â will admit all Indigenous students who meet the eligibility requirements. As well as satisfying the academic standards required of any medical student, the shortlisted Indigenous applicants are âinvited to undergo an additional interview with a panel comprised of elders and Indigenous community members and physiciansâ. This, according to the programmeâs director, Tibetha Kemble, is âan opportunity for Indigenous candidates to reaffirm their cultural connection to community and reflect back to us that they are entering the medical school wanting to contribute to the Indigenous community through the special place they would hold as a health professionalâ.
This has already led to a noticeable increase in interest from potential Indigenous applicants, Kemble says. Given that âreturning to community is where the greatest health needs are: where Indigenous people need to see an Indigenous physician across the tableâ, she hopes that the programme will help âbuild a critical mass of Indigenous health professionalsâ.
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In terms of the curriculum, Kemble refers to which exhorts medical and nursing schools âto require all students to take a course dealing with Aboriginal health issues, [involving] skills-based training in intercultural competency, conflict resolution, human rights and anti-racismâ. In response to this, a working group at Alberta has produced a 12-module course on Indigenous health. The first half of this, examining the health issues faced by Indigenous populations, was introduced this academic year; the second half, to be introduced in October, will consider âtraditional and Indigenous ways of being in relation to healthâ.
This will include questions of âintercultural competencyâ, such as âworking safely and respectfully with Indigenous women in birthing practicesâ, Kemble says. But it will also aim to âbalance out a one-sided view of education generally, based on a biomedical modelâ. More specifically, âif students are looking at some content on cancer or any other condition, thereâs always a case study that examines how Indigenous peoples are affected, how we might respond and how an Indigenous worldview might approach this. Itâs becoming embedded as a core part of the course. I canât guarantee this will span every single medical condition, but for the conditions that disproportionately affect Indigenous people there will be some balanced content and students will learn about different forms of treatment for the same condition.â

Such statements and policies, however, ring alarm bells for some observers. One is Rodney Clifton, an emeritus professor of education at the University of Manitoba. His wife is Indigenous, but, for all its faults, he believes that âthe Western scientific method is the best way of testing the effectiveness of medical interventionsâ. To illustrate his point, he tells a story.
âA few years ago, an Indigenous friend of ours had a grandson who had cancer in his leg,â he recalls. âThe oncologist said there was a good chance ofâŠsaving the child if surgery [to remove the cancerous tissue] was performed soon. Rather than follow this advice, the family decided to go to Indian healers around North America for alternative treatments. A beautiful child died because the cancer spread.â
As Clifton sees it, âIndian medicine is being accepted in universities on faith alone. Moreover, those making the claims for the faith-based [treatments] are not generally open to testing the outcomes in a controlled experimental, scientific, wayâŠI do not think that universities should embrace the idea that knowledge is not open to debate and scientific investigation.â
In his Conversation article, Simon Fraserâs Nicholas notes that âIndigenous peoples donât need Western science to validate or legitimate their knowledge systemâ. However, âsome do appreciate the verificationâ. And âalthough hypothesis testing is not a feature of Traditional Ecological Knowledge, rigour and replicability are not absentâ.
Speaking to THE, he cites research by Kelly Bannister, co-director of the POLIS Project on Ecological Governance and an adjunct professor in the Faculty of Human and Social Development at the University of Victoria, which âdemonstrated [the] anti-fungal and anti-microbial propertiesâ of balsam root, long used medicinally in the interior of British Columbia. Just as âWestern scientific medicineâ is fallible but uses laboratory testing to make progress, âthere was essentially a comparable kind of testing reflected in [traditional knowledge] of plant properties as to what had positive (or negative) effects, based on hundreds/thousands of years of observing what happened when usedâ.
But Clifton is not convinced. In a 2017 article in THE, he laments that âcurrent political thinkingâ in Canada holds that ârespectful peopleâ cannot âlegitimately questionâ Indigenous Elders, the holders of traditional knowledge. Hence, âscholars are afraid to publicly question the indigenisation of knowledge for fear of being labelled neocolonialist or even racistâ.
He believes that âthere is a lot of lip service being paid to indigenisation, and this is generating considerable [heat] with very little light. Universities are doing it because they mustâŠMost professors and administrators are smart enough to realise it is a scam, but they will not say that out loud.â
Someone who is willing to be publicly equally sceptical about many aspects of the indigenisation agenda is Frances Widdowson, an associate professor in the department of economics, justice and policy studies at Mount Royal University in Calgary.
In September 2018, she that a document given to faculty members by her university's Office of Academic Indigenization, called âIndigenizing Mount Royalâs Curricula: A Call For Engagementâ, contained âserious flawsâ and constituted âan unprecedented threat to academic freedom, freedom of inquiry and academic standardsâ.
In a for the Society for Academic Freedom and Scholarship in April, she takes exception, for example, to the fact that the universityâs biology department is âworking with numerous community Elders and Knowledge Keepersâ to ensure that students will obtain âa diverse knowledge base that includes the traditional Indigenous knowledgeâ. And she deplores the stated goal of building a âculture of celebrationâ at Mount Royal ârather than one that encourages critical thinking and rigorous methods. Even worse, it is tacitly assumed that anyone who has reservations about indigenisation is not an âallyâ of Indigenous people. This has created huge difficulties for faculty who question the hype. My criticisms of indigenisation, for example, have resulted in accusations that I am a âpathetic racistâ with a âhateful perspectiveâ, who is damaging Mount Royal Universityâs reputation.â
Speaking to THE, Widdowson suggests that some of the things that go on in the name of âindigenisationâ can harm those they are supposed to help: âI talk to a lot of scientists who say âThis is not beneficial to Indigenous people.â They should be encouraged to become scientists like everyone else and not have a separate stream of âIndigenous scienceâ, which is, at best, opinion and, at worst, unverifiable spiritual beliefs. Thatâs not to say [that such beliefs] shouldnât be studied, just like Christianity and Islam, but this is about saying that spiritual belief is actually a form of knowledge, which is a whole different question and extremely condescending. The people who will suffer are Indigenous.â
Although Widdowson acknowledges that traditional plant remedies may have therapeutic value, âthe difficulty comes with denying the huge amount of scientific progress that has unfolded. Willow bark is not the same as aspirin, even though itâs the same root substance. The amount of understanding and technology that went into creating aspirin is at a much higher level.â
The notion that âIndigenous people have a separate way of knowing and doing thingsâ, Widdowson continues, can lead to claims that âit is inappropriate for a non-Indigenous person to speak honestly with them. People say I am disrespectful, when I see it as âThis is how I am respectful, because I am letting people know my honest opinion and not pretending to believe something that I do not think is true.ââ

Where the limits of indigenisation lie remains very much up for grabs. Nicholas, for instance, says its manifestation in the curriculum is âstill unfoldingâ, and is likely to âtake different forms in different contextsâ.
But it does seem reasonable to expect a continuation of the trend for Indigenous involvement in research â particularly where local knowledge and understanding has indisputable benefits. The goanna lizards paper notes that âthe integration of Indigenous knowledge into natural resource management has been criticised as a fashionable trend, at times amounting to little more than an exercise in âboxâtickingâ. In an era of political correctness, âcultural diversityâ is often valued through the lens of ideology (sometimes bordering on tokenism). In contrast, our study shows direct scientific advantages to cultural diversity in research teams and to genuine collaboration among people from differing races and backgrounds.â
Georgia Ward-Fear, the paperâs corresponding author and a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Sydney, tells THE that although it is crucial to acknowledge the differences between different Indigenous cultures, incorporating âIndigenous perspectives on learning, understanding and observing living systemsâ into scientific courses could form the basis for âa really well-rounded, progressive curriculumâ. For instance, she thinks that Indigenous practical skills such as tracking, hunting and âgaining ecological informationâ could be incorporated into a âmore nuancedâ course in field skills.
The conflict is likely to be over how Indigenous involvement in research is conceptualised. The Scandinavian paper notes that while the NÀÀtĂ€mö co-management project was successful, the expectations of international policymakers regarding the integration of traditional knowledge with science are âat times unrealistically high, and hard to meet at local levels and in national policy contextsâ. It also notes âfish biologistsâ tendency to consider SĂĄmi knowledge as a source of data on specific factors related to salmon rather than a knowledge systemâ that positions salmon in a larger ecological context of relationships. And it notes that the projects that âseem to fulfil [SĂĄmi] expectations of traditional knowledge co-production with scienceâŠseem to have the least impact on policy, and vice versa". This creates âquestions of legitimacyâ among the SĂĄmi participants.
âTo achieve social robustness,â the paper suggests, âprojects need to balance scientific credibility with legitimacy among local and Indigenous rights holders. This balance might entail giving up on expectations of integrating traditional ecological knowledge with science and embracing the undefined spaces within Arctic and Indigenous knowledge production.â
As âsettler countriesâ wrestle with their dark histories and continuing inequalities, the question of how far the indigenisation process should go is likely to put the relationship between community and reparation on the one hand and research, knowledge and science on the other into ever sharper relief.Ìę
matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com
Academics and university leaders will discuss how universities play an effective role in supporting civic efforts to create a more inclusive society at ÌÇĐÄVlogâs Teaching Excellence Summit, which is taking place at Western University, in London, Ontario, Canada, from 4-6 June 2019.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Â Native wisdom
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