Research Assistant Professor @IARC_Alaska. Marine ecologist & lifelong Alaskan who cares about the ecology of our marine resources & the people who rely on them
ARCUS is funding early-career researchers to attend one of two Alaska-based conferences this fall. Explore #Arctic research and connect with #Alaska Native priorities. Preference for #BIPOC applicants. Undergrads encouraged!
Details: https://t.co/yvsiYZ9MwW
#DiversityInSTEM
Come work with us @IARC_Alaska@uafairbanks and tell our stories of #Arctic science, community engagement, actionable science, and unique research partnerships.
https://t.co/aWhcfOJRdk
4️⃣Moving along, we find ourselves at #4 "Nunaaqqit Savaqatigivlugich—working with communities: evolving collaborations around an Alaska Arctic observatory and knowledge hub" by @HauserDonna, @bertaglenn, @kivvaq_pikok, et al. Read the paper: https://t.co/Fx1gGHMQLO #BestOfCSP
Looking forward to distributing free copies to youth and schools in communities. Any royalties will go to youth programs administered by the Native Village of Kotzebue! Just in time for the holidays! 🤩
📢Thrilled to announce a new CHILDREN'S book!
Here's the cutest little seal pup, Natchiq, and her story of growing up in her snow cave on the sea ice in northern Alaska. Indigenous Knowledge, Iñupiaq terms, & scientific findings are woven throughout. https://t.co/eYEPr2Mp39
Grateful for my coauthors and mentors Kathy Frost & Alex Whiting and the Indigenous Knowledge generously shared by Iñupiaq Elders from Qikiqtaġruk (Kotzebue) John Goodwin, Cyrus Harris, and Pearl Goodwin. @akcassiope put together some incredible illustrations!
Funding for this creative and different project originally came from @NPRBscience, following from a project to "rescue" data collected in the 80's using dogs to find seal lairs. https://t.co/EtCLVX7h6e
Best part of my day? Watching @bertaglenn blow the socks off everyone as she rolled out our chapter of the 2023 Arctic Report Card #AGU23. Check it out: https://t.co/pB8uKVr6EI
Nunaaqqit Savaqatigivlugich—working with communities: evolving collaborations around an Alaska Arctic observatory and knowledge hub
Read the paper by @HauserDonna and colleagues in @ArcticScienceJ ➡️ https://t.co/YlLlzMz4om
“@bertaglenn who is Iñupiaq from Utqiaġvik, created a multimedia story map to visualize environmental changes, how they affect communities and their cultural context … built on the experience of people in her region, the North Slope.”
https://t.co/yJGgfMZkQN
@bertaglenn There's a lot to this paper, but my favorite part is in the Discussion where there's student reflections on being part of our project as the next generation of Indigenous scholars and leaders. Mik'aq, @kivvaq_pikok and @bertaglenn knock it out of the park!
📢New paper!! And unlike any I've been part of before: "Nunaaqqit Savaqatigivlugich—working with communities". We bring together academics, students, and community-based observers to tell a story of change in coastal #Arctic#Alaska, but also about how we work together.
Donna D.W. Hauser et al. reveal how the Alaska Arctic Observatory and Knowledge Hub increased knowledge exchange, made space for the next generation of Indigenous scholars & created locally relevant data for community planning. Read the 📄 here: https://t.co/siakW32gM9
@bertaglenn Translation: Since time immemorial Iñupiat have been living in the Arctic (the cold land).Observations can inform decision-making. We want to learn (generate knowledge) together.