2013
DOI: 10.3138/carto.48.3.1685
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Mapping Traditional Knowledge: Digital Cartography in the Canadian North

Abstract: Digital cartography offers exciting opportunities for recording indigenous knowledge, particularly in contexts where a people's relationship to the land has high cultural significance. Canada's north offers a useful case study of both the opportunities and challenges of such projects. Through the Geomatics and Cartographic Research Centre (GCRC), Inuit peoples have been invited to become partners in innovative digital mapping projects, including creating atlases of traditional place names, recording the patter… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…Traditional knowledge (TK) is the key to survival for Inuit in the Canadian Arctic (Duerden, et al, 1996;Engler, et al, 2013;Freeman, et al, 2005;McGregor, 2004). This survival is nested in the relationship the Inuit have with the environment; the wildlife, land, sea, and ice and is the basis of TK (Engler, et al, 2013;Freeman, et al, 2005;Pearce, et al, 2011;McGregor, 2004;Duerden, et al, 1996;Berkes and Berkes, 2007). There is a myriad of definitions of traditional knowledge, but there are common threads to define TK in an Inuit context.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Traditional knowledge (TK) is the key to survival for Inuit in the Canadian Arctic (Duerden, et al, 1996;Engler, et al, 2013;Freeman, et al, 2005;McGregor, 2004). This survival is nested in the relationship the Inuit have with the environment; the wildlife, land, sea, and ice and is the basis of TK (Engler, et al, 2013;Freeman, et al, 2005;Pearce, et al, 2011;McGregor, 2004;Duerden, et al, 1996;Berkes and Berkes, 2007). There is a myriad of definitions of traditional knowledge, but there are common threads to define TK in an Inuit context.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Through an oral manner, the knowledge is passed from Elders to the younger generation and from community to community. Furthermore, human interaction and long-term direct experience are the fundamental processes that are the building blocks of TK (Engler, et al, 2013;Pulsifer, et al, 2011;Freeman, et al, 2000;Pearce, et al, 2011). This intimate knowledge of the landscape creates mental maps that are the crucial to understanding the environment (Freeman, et al, 2000, Pearce 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two specific examples of such research projects are the Atlas of Inuit Sea Ice Knowledge and Use (Siku Atlas; Pulsifer et al 2011), and the use of digital cartography in the Canadian north (Engler, Scassa & Taylor 2013). These relationships and the input gained from IK are crucial to provide data and information for decision making at different levels.…”
Section: A Place For Indigenous Knowledge In Polar Data Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A number of northern and Indigenous communities are interested in preserving Indigenous Knowledge (IK; Engler, Scassa & Taylor 2013;Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami 2016;Scassa & Taylor 2013;Pearce et al 2009;Pulsifer et al 2011). IK is a ' cumulative body of knowledge and beliefs, handed down through generations by cultural transmission, about the relationship of living beings (including humans) with one another and with their environment' (Scassa & Taylor 2017: 2).…”
Section: A Place For Indigenous Knowledge In Polar Data Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The main products of the Nunaliit framework are its cybercartographic atlases, such as Homelessness, Living Indigenous Knowledge, Kitikmeot, Canadian Trade with the World and the Antarctica atlas. A cybercartographic atlas is different from the traditional concept of an atlas, offering itself as a kind of metaphor for diverse quantitative and qualitative data sets, which are linked by location and presented in a variety of new ways Taylor 2013, Taylor andPyne 2010;Pyne and Taylor 2012).…”
Section: Nunaliit Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%