The Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage (IPinCH) project (2008–2016) was an international, multi-sectoral research collaboration based at Simon Fraser University (SFU), directed by Dr. George Nicholas. The project was designed to build research, knowledge, and resource foundations to assist scholars, institutions, descendant communities, policymakers, and other stakeholders in negotiating equitable and successful research policies and practices in the realm of cultural heritage. Through partnerships with Indigenous communities (and others), the use of reflexive and participatory research methodologies, and dynamic intercultural and interdisciplinary exchanges, the IPinCH project examined intellectual property (IP) dilemmas arising over issues of control related to specific forms of cultural knowledge, how that knowledge is used, who has access, and who benefits.
The research team consisted of 52 team members from 20 universities in 8 countries: 23 archaeologists from diverse subfields; 9 cultural anthropologists; 11 legal scholars and lawyers specializing in IP or Indigenous Rights; 4 ethicists and/or philosophers; and specialists in cultural tourism, museum studies, ethnobiology, open-access to knowledge, and other fields; plus 30 graduate students; and 98 Associate members from around the world. In addition, the community-based initiatives funded by IPinCH (see below) involved community researchers, elders, and youth. The team worked with 25 partner organizations, which included Parks Canada, the World Intellectual Property Organization, the Arctic Studies Center (Smithsonian Institution), the Center for Ainu and Indigenous Studies (Japan), the World Archaeological Congress, and the Sto:lo Research and Resource Management Centre, amongst others.
IPinCH-funded 12 Community-Based Initiatives situated within Indigenous communities around the world and six special initiatives (http://www.sfu.ca/ipinch/project-components/community-based-initiatives/). Each project was co-developed with the community partners who were fully involved in developing research questions, methods, and outputs, and reviewing project data before it was made public. These community-based initiatives targeted a wide range of issues, including:
In general, these initiatives are sustainable, culturally appropriate, and community-embedded projects that address the preservation and educational use of IP and cultural heritage. In a number of these projects, elders and youth worked together to collect, inventory, and preserve traditional knowledge.
IPinCH also worked with university ethics offices to help develop or refine research policies and funding transfers to facilitate research involving First Nations by promoting four elements of equitable research: reconciliation, relationships, responsibility, and respect. There are substantial challenges to community-based research, including: mutual understanding of research needs, goals, methods, and outcomes; trust and respect, and cultural differences, which may be substantial, but not always apparent. University policies thus need to recognize things often take much longer than anticipated due to difficulties in transferring funds from university to Aboriginal organizations and the need to overcome wariness of “collaborative” projects in which academics do not control the process or outcomes.
Outcomes of the project included:
All of these are available on the IPinCH website: www.sfu.ca/ipinch
Project objectives were:
These objectives were pursued through four guiding questions that permeated most IPinCH initiatives, including the community initiatives it funded, as well as various research initiatives, public outreach and education, and student training:
The IPinCH project was an unconventional academic research project that sought a more complete understanding of the complex IP issues that increasingly affect Indigenous knowledge systems and research relationships. The workshops, publications, and resources developed continue to provide assistance and resources to diverse stakeholders to better understand and address these concerns. The insights gained through collaborative projects developed with Indigenous partners help to catalyze new theoretical insights, policy development, and more accountable research relationships. These include better understanding of both the nature of Indigenous intellectual property and notions of heritage in which tangible/intangible “property” and nature/culture are indivisible. This research has also revealed substantial challenges in funding community-based studies through conventional academic channels, and so considerable time and effort were thus directed to implementing ethics reviews and grant transfers and to ensure partners retained ownership of research results.
George Nicholas
Director of IPinCH
778-782-5709
Nicholas@sfu.ca
In 2012 the Ministry of Advanced Education, Skills and Training (“the Ministry”) launched the Aboriginal Post-Secondary Education and Training Policy Framework and Action Plan, which commits to improving outcomes for Indigenous learners. A key objective of the Policy Framework is that public post-secondary institutions will implement policies, programs and services based on leading practices.
The Ministry has since developed materials on leading practices—including on advisory councils, gathering places, Indigenous student housing, partnerships, transitions, mentoring, Indigenous knowledge, and assessment and benchmarking--that have been reviewed by the B.C. Aboriginal Post-Secondary Coordinators, Indigenous Leadership Roundtable, Aboriginal Post-Secondary Education and Training Partners, First Nations Education Steering Committee and Indigenous Adult and Higher Learning Association.
The following summary is intended to assist faculty, administrators and staff at post-secondary institutions to implement leading practices in the respectful use of Indigenous knowledge– whether that be making improvements to existing practices or establishing new ones.
(A) Leading Practices in Building Awareness of Indigenous Knowledge
(B) Leading Practices in Research and Data Collection
(C) Leading Practices in Pedagogy, Curriculum and Teaching Resources