CARE-ing about Indigenous Data in a Wide World

Oct72025
14:30 – 16:00

Don’t panic!
A Survival Guide for Law and Ethics in Research

Hier is an overview of all workshops from our Legal Workshops Series:

Indigenous Data Sovereignty, Governance, and Ethics refers to the rights of indigenous peoples to manage their data (sovereignty) and how it’s used by others (governance). The terms build upon the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and is most widely known today through the acronym CARE: Collective Benefit, Authority to Control, Responsibility, Ethics. While these lofty principles may be universal, practical implementation is often bounded by the jurisdictions that the data lives in – who and where it was collected, where it will be analyzed, where it will be stored.

In this workshop we will discuss Indigenous Data Sovereignty, Governance, and Ethics and how to apply the CARE Principles to your work. We will look at practical case studies around claimed indigenous data and look for relationships between them and your research.

Training Team

Joseph Gum

Joseph Gum is a physical oceanographer and data steward. He is Native Hawaiian and leads the ESIP Sustainable Data Management Cluster, leading work on indigenous data sovereignty, governance, and ethics and data resiliency. He is most recently the author of the Repository Crisis Scorecards, a tool for assessing repository resiliency to stressors such as natural disasters.

Target Group

Researchers, data stewards, etc. from agricultural, biodiversity and earth system research.

The Workshop will be held in English.

Language:
English

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Keywords:
Data Sovereignty, Governance, Ethics, CARE-Principles, indigenous peoples

Registration:

Fotrthe time being please register on our german website. English registration is coming soon.