Report from the IASC Action Group on Indigenous Involvement,
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Date
2020Corporate Author
International Arctic Science Committee (IASC)
Status
PublishedPages
17pp.
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Show full item recordAbstract
In all matters, IASC strives for an inclusive approach by “encouraging and facilitating cooperation in all aspects of Arctic research, in all countries engaged in Arctic research and in all areas of the Arctic region.” Rather than defining human and environmental boundaries, IASC tries to bridge those boundaries.
IASC does not endorse any one definition of the Arctic region. There are many different definitions – astronomical, political, meteorological, ecological, and more. Natural systems do not reflect geopolitical boundaries, and often neither do social systems follow such drawn lines. The extent of the Arctic is flexible, dynamic, and context-specific.
Furthermore, in defining Indigeneity, self-identification of Arctic Indigenous Peoples and groups is the appropriate and accepted standard. Recognition of Indigenous groups at some level (regionally, nationally, internationally, etc.) and expression of interest in IASC’s mission is sufficient for inclusion in the IASC community.
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Publisher
International Arctic Sciences CommitteeAkureyri, Iceland
Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.7Maturity Level
MatureSpatial Coverage
Arctic RegionCitation
International Arctic Science Committee (2020) Report from the IASC Action Group on Indigenous Involvement. Akureyri, Iceland, International Arctic Science Committee (IASC), 17pp. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25607/OBP-1872Collections