Educational Research and Reviews

  • Abbreviation: Educ. Res. Rev.
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 1990-3839
  • DOI: 10.5897/ERR
  • Start Year: 2006
  • Published Articles: 2006

Review

What if indigenous knowledge contradicts accepted scientific findings? - the hidden agenda: respect, caring and passion towards aboriginal research in the context of applying western academic rules

Norbert Witt
Faculty of Education, University of Regina, Canada.
Email: [email protected]

  •  Accepted: 21 May 2007
  •  Published: 30 September 2007

Abstract

 

The statement in the title, what if Indigenous Knowledge contradicts accepted scientific findings 
(Fowler, 2000), is an expression of the dilemma people who research Indigenous Knowledge think they 
find themselves in when they are confronted with different interpretations of what it means to be 
human, or, as I may summarize it, with different cultural interpretations of human existence.  I sense a 
certain amount of fear in this statement, which, indeed, suggests an Indigenous interpretation that 
threatens the accepted scientific worldview.  The question is, of course, who the accepting entity is and 
what the acceptance is measured on. The statement was made by an academic (PhD) executive of a 
diamond company who, responsible for inclusion of Indigenous Knowledge in the environmental 
assessment the company had to do before starting the mine, suspects contradictory interpretations on 
land use by the Indigenous people who occupy the land that should be developed by the company he 
represents. With this statement, he sets the stage for an analysis of research data on Indigenous 
Knowledge the company collected in order to follow recommendations of the Canadian Environmental 
Assessment Act (1996) that would dismiss the validity of the very subject, Indigenous Knowledge, that 
is to be integrated in environmental assessment done on Indigenous lands.  His use of the term 
accepted scientific findings is unfortunate as he tries to recruit the academic community for reinforcing 
his view on the suspected contradictions of Indigenous Knowledge to scientific knowledge. He 
juxtaposes accepted, academic or scientific knowledge production to Indigenous, supposedly nonscientific knowledge, and in the process creates an image of a united academy which keeps Indigenous 
Knowledge out rather than integrating it, ignoring a development within the academy, carried by 
Indigenous scholars, which is opening paths to integrate Indigenous knowledge, although, admittedly, 
this does not happen without a challenge of the status quo. Looking into knowledge production 
anywhere we will find that the basis is observation, no matter where knowledge is produced. What is 
then the problem with acknowledging knowledge from others? One hint is given by Parsons (2005) who 
quotes on Thornhill (www.kronia.com) that “you have to observe what nature actually does, not what 
you think it should do”, a statement that refers to assumptions (hypotheses) that influence both the 
researchers’ observation and the analysis of it.   I have to clarify here that he is referring to an academic 
establishment which, rather than trying to find new insights, tries to protect accepted paradigms.  In 
this context any different interpretation of the observed facts would pose a threat, and the very 
presence of Indigenous Knowledge might be seen as such.  In this context, the rules of research and 
acceptance of knowledge production become a control mechanism that, rather than expanding 
knowledge, only allows a point of view that protects the Status Quo, preventing knowledge from real 
growth.  In this way, the acceptance of knowledge researched according to those rules will be 
measured not on the basis of the philosophy of the people who hold this knowledge but on the degree 
of whiteness, meaning its closeness to the protected and privileged, western academic knowledge.  I 
see Fowler’s (2000) statement within this context. What I will discuss are examples that show how the 
company uses academic research analysis to create a context which keeps Indigenous Knowledge out 
of the academic realm.  Of course, the driving factor might be to validate the economic agenda of the 
company and devalue Indigenous concerns of destruction of their environment, source of Indigenous 
economy and, ultimately, their way of life.  As legal interpretations were also used in order to justify 
such views on Indigenous Knowledge, I will discuss those interpretations, using some rulings by  
226       Educ. Res. Rev. 
 
Canadian courts that contradict them.  In the end, I will discuss the academic context, showing that, 
while there is a struggle by Indigenous scholars to integrate Indigenous worldviews, the doors for 
acceptance of Indigenous Knowledge are not as closed as the statement in the title of this paper might 
suggest.  I will, however, also point out that there is a tendency to protect a Status Quo of scientific 
knowledge produced in the academy and that Indigenous Knowledge has not yet been completely 
accepted, and as long as control of knowledge production and interpretation of knowledge according to 
its degree of academic whiteness remains in the hands of the privileged, Indigenous people in the 
academy will have to struggle to have Indigenous Knowledge accepted. My examples refer to research 
of Indigenous Knowledge in the Omushkegowuk (Swampy Cree) community of Attawapiskat in 
Northern Ontario, Canada set up and supervised by the diamond company.  My interest in this issue 
stems from my status of, albeit being non-Aboriginal, being a member of the community by marriage, 
being involved in community matters with all my in-law relatives living in that community.  Having such 
personal connection to the people I also witness that due to the mistrust in the validity of their 
knowledge, Indigenous people still have a hard time trusting the claim of their colonizers to have 
moved beyond colonialism. 
 
Key words: Indigenous research, Research in Indigenous communities, ways of