Kim TallBear

#2 The Ancient One

By |2017-10-01T22:10:38-06:00November 14th, 2016|Categories: Kim TallBear, Media|

  In 1996, two teenagers stumbled across some very old human remains. The struggle to identify them and determine who owns them kicked off a fight that has lasted 20 years — and is finally about to be resolved. Go to GimletMedia.com/FallSeason to subscribe to Undone and Gimlet’s other new podcasts. Credits Undone [...]

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Sorry, that DNA test doesn’t make you Indigenous

By |2017-10-01T22:10:38-06:00November 6th, 2016|Categories: Kim TallBear, Media|

  So you send your DNA off to an ancestry company, and get a report back that says you're part Native American, or part Italian, or part Nigerian. So what? Maybe you're excited to learn about your roots, but can you really consider yourself part of that culture? Not really, says Kim TallBear. "We [...]

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DISRUPTING SETTLEMENT, SEX, AND NATURE – An Indigenous Logic of Relationality

By |2017-10-01T22:10:38-06:00October 14th, 2016|Categories: DECOLONIAL SUSTAINABILITY LABORATORY, Kim TallBear|

Abstract We live in an era of decimation dubbed the “anthropocene.” Settler-colonial states such as the US and Canada disproportionately consume the world. As we reconsider violent human practices and conceive of new ways of living with Earth in the face of a feared apocalypse, we must [...]

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Putting ancestry to the DNA test

By |2017-10-01T22:10:38-06:00July 22nd, 2016|Categories: Kim TallBear, Media|

For a fee, you can fill out an application, swab your cheek and find out if you have Native ancestry. Dozens of online services perform this service for hundreds of curious people. But does the result mean you can finally declare your Cherokee heritage? What do online DNA kits really tell us about Native ancestry? [...]

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Mission:

Indigenous Science, Technology, and Society (Indigenous STS) is an international research and teaching hub, housed at the University of Alberta, for the bourgeoning sub-field of Indigenous STS. Our mission is two-fold: 1) To build Indigenous scientific literacy by training graduate students, postdoctoral, and community fellows to grapple expertly with techno-scientific projects and topics that affect their territories, peoples, economies, and institutions; and 2) To produce research and public intellectual outputs with the goal to inform national, global, and Indigenous thought and policymaking related to science and technology. Indigenous STS is committed to building and supporting techno-scientific projects and ways of thinking that promote Indigenous self-determination.
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