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Reimagining Collaboration : Indigenous and Scientific Knowledge in a Time of Climate Crisis

Reimagining Collaboration : Indigenous and Scientific Knowledge in a Time of Climate Crisis

by Princeton University Press

£25.00
MPN9780691257808
Prices updated 21 May 2026

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A new direction for collaborative climate science, grounded in Indigenous concepts of togetherness, sharing, and generative convergenceAcross universities, labs, NGOs, and public agencies, collaboration has become a compulsory virtue, especially in climate and environmental science.Many such partnerships with Indigenous communities, however, are largely performative, with Indigenous participation merely tokenistic.These collaborations are often rushed by funding cycles, shaped by prestige hierarchies, and organized so that Indigenous expertise is consulted, extracted, or translated into “data,” while scientific agendas stay largely unchanged.In Reimagining Collaboration, social anthropologist Olga Ulturgasheva offers a new analytic and practical model for collaborative climate science: coupling, a deliberate, mediated convergence of distinct knowledge traditions that does not erase difference but uses it to generate new capacities for action. Ulturgasheva emphasizes the importance of the skilled facilitator or “human interface” (often an Indigenous scholar) as a catalyst for the encounter between scientific and Indigenous knowledge.Drawing on fifteen years of fieldwork and close engagement with cross-disciplinary projects, Ulturgasheva—herself a member of the Eveny Indigenous community of Siberia—shows that these collaborations succeed or fail at the level of method: how problems are framed, who gets to define evidence, what counts as proof, and how authority is silently reproduced.She proposes a set of principles, grounded in Eveny concepts of togetherness, sharing, and generative convergence, for designing collaborations that are ethical, scientifically robust, and aligned with the values of decolonization. Olga Ulturgasheva is associate professor in social anthropology in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Manchester.She is the author of Narrating the Future in Siberia and the coeditor of Risky Futures.

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