Ethical collaboration and the need for training: Partnerships between Native American Tribes and climate science organisations

IF 0.9 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Caitlin K. Kirby, Citralina Haruo, K. Whyte, J. Libarkin, C. Caldwell, Rebecca Edler
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Indigenous peoples develop and utilise climate science resources to address climate change impacts, and climate scientists often collaborate on such projects. Little is known about whether climate science organisations (CSOs) adequately train their staff to work ethically with Indigenous peoples, promoting benefits for Tribes while reducing harms. To research this training, we conducted interviews with CSO employees (n=9) and Native American Tribal citizens (n=7). Thematic content analysis revealed that many challenges, benefits and common goals exist for both groups. Tribes were more likely to discuss challenges, focusing on trust and capacity building. CSOs were more likely to discuss benefits, focusing on information exchange. Both CSOs and Tribes provide training activities for CSO employees, but training programs are not mandated or consistent across employees and organisations, and they are typically not evaluated. Our research indicates a need for co-created and evaluated training programs which take into account the challenges faced in cross-cultural partnerships. Keywordsclimate change, Indigenous peoples, community engagement, tribally driven participatory research, ethics, STEM education
伦理合作和培训需求:美洲土著部落和气候科学组织之间的伙伴关系
土著人民开发和利用气候科学资源来应对气候变化的影响,气候科学家经常在这类项目上进行合作。气候科学组织(cso)是否充分培训了他们的员工,使他们与土著人民一起合乎道德地工作,在减少危害的同时促进部落的利益,人们对此知之甚少。为了研究这种培训,我们对CSO员工(n=9)和美国原住民部落公民(n=7)进行了访谈。专题内容分析表明,这两个群体存在许多挑战、利益和共同目标。部落更有可能讨论挑战,关注信任和能力建设。公民社会组织更倾向于讨论利益,关注信息交流。CSO和Tribes都为CSO员工提供培训活动,但培训计划在员工和组织之间没有强制性或一致性,而且通常不进行评估。我们的研究表明,考虑到跨文化伙伴关系中面临的挑战,需要共同创建和评估培训计划。关键词:气候变化,原住民,社区参与,部落驱动的参与式研究,伦理,STEM教育
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
28.60%
发文量
5
审稿时长
34 weeks
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