Monday 02.02.26
Indigenous Engagement and Co-Creation in Arctic Research
Date: Monday, 02/02/2026
Time: 11:00 - 12:30
Location: Importkompaniet, the Edge
The Arctic region is a testing ground for how societies, ecosystems, and species can adapt—or fail—in the face of rapid transformation. Climate change, overtourism, and shifting multispecies relations are reshaping landscapes, livelihoods, and cultures, often bringing them into conflict.
International and cross-cultural cooperation in Arctic research depends on mutual respect, ethical engagement, and the recognition of Indigenous knowledge as a knowledge system in its own right.
The Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) defines Indigenous knowledge as generational knowledge — passed from elders to younger generations through practice, stories, and lived experience. This form of knowledge is deeply rooted in doing and observing, not only in speaking or theorizing, emphasizing collaboration “with, not about” Indigenous communities, the sharing and co-production of data, and ensuring that Indigenous partners retain control over how knowledge is used.
Indigenous knowledge is a systematic way of thinking applied to phenomena across biological, physical, cultural and spiritual systems. It includes insights based on evidence acquired through direct and long-term experiences and extensive and multigenerational observations, lessons and skills. It has developed over millennia and is still developing in a living process, including knowledge acquired today and in the future, and it is passed on from generation to generation.
The Sámi Council encourages researchers to adapt methods, timing, and communication to local contexts — for instance, aligning schedules with reindeer herding seasons, supporting interpretation in Sámi languages, and building long-term trust. Knowledge that is place-based, such as sacred sites or foraging areas, must be handled sensitively and always under the control of local knowledge holders.
Nine Nordic-Canadian research projects were recently launched under the call Sustainable development in the Arctic, emphasising the importance of Indigenous perspectives and co-creation when doing research in the Arctic. The network Making knowledge for sustainable transformations (MAST) explores different approaches to knowing-through-making. These efforts are examples of a wider shift in Arctic research: from studying Indigenous communities to working with them as equal partners, ensuring that research strengthens Indigenous cultures, languages, and self-determination while deepening our understanding of the Arctic as a shared home.
Questions for discussion include:
• How can Indigenous and scientific knowledge systems work together to reframe conflicts over species, land, and resources?
• Can we create models of co-research and co-governance that are both sustainable and just?
• How can we ensure that the collaborations lead to knowledge sharing and mutual benefits instead of knowledge mining and extraction?
• What are the roles of the different stakeholders in such a knowledge exchange?
• Whose knowledge counts when deciding the future of the Arctic?
This event is hosted by NordForsk and UiT- The Arctic University of Norway
Speakers
Torjer Andreas Olsen, Professor, UiT The Arctic University of Norway
Sara Olsvig, Chair, Inuit Circumpolar Council
Gunn-Britt Retter, Head of Arctic and Environmental Unit, Saami Council
Rune Vistad, Director, Department for International Cooperation, The Research Council of Norway
Hanna-Maret Outakoski, Professor, Sámi University of Applied Sciences
Jørgen Berge, Pro Rector for Research, UiT The Arctic University of Norway