Anako Indigenous Research Institute

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The Ānako Indigenous Research Institute brings together researchers, students, and Indigenous communities to foster dialogue and understanding of ethical, balanced, and respectful research with Indigenous peoples and in Indigenous territories.

02/08/2026

📅Mark your calendars!

Carleton University and The Centre for Indigenous Support and Community Engagement are proud to host our annual round dance!

The Round Dance is open for students, staff, faculty, and surrounding community. Location is in the Fenn Lounge inside of Teraanga Commons (formerly known as Residence Commons) at Carleton University. Join us for dance, songs, sharing, food, and celebration. Attendance is free!

For questions, please contact [email protected]

11/06/2025

INDG 4905: Land As Relation is an immersive course that invites participants to explore Indigenous perspectives through discussions, readings, community work, land-based activities and a final project.

From February 15 to March 5, 2026, students will spend time in Cusco and the Indigenous community of Paru Paru, Peru, with Kahente Horn-Miller. The course is open to 5 Indigenous and 4 non-Indigenous students, with airfare and accommodations provided.

We encourage eligible students to submit a letter of interest to [email protected] or Mikayla Paton (Indigenous Initiatives and Special Projects Coordinator) at [email protected].

More information is available at https://carleton.ca/indigenous/avpii/land-as-relation/.

2nd Annual International Conference of the Africa IndigenousKnowledge Research Network (AIKRN)Call for PapersIndigenous ...
10/08/2025

2nd Annual International Conference of the Africa Indigenous
Knowledge Research Network (AIKRN)
Call for Papers
Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Transformative Wisdom: International Perspectives on Indigenous Economies, Entrepreneurship, and Sustainable Livelihood
First Nations University of Canada
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
(or Virtual / Online Option)
June 16-18, 2026
Indigenous communities across the world possess complex knowledge systems that include epistemic ways of being, knowing, and doing. Wise practices from Indigenous Knowledges that prioritize environmental stewardship, care for community/extended kinship networks, and planning for the next
seven generations can inform mainstream systemic change. Further, much can be learned from Indigenous experiences with the postcolonial state in terms of reconciliation, agency, recentering, and ownership/intellectual property of Indigenous knowledges.
We invite papers that address (but not limited to) any of the following themes:
• Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Comparative Epistemologies
• Indigenous Wise Practices: Comparative Perspectives
• Indigenous Economies and Transformation in Postcolonial Societies
• Entrepreneurship and Livelihood Strategies in Indigenous Communities
• Climate Change Adaptation and Environmental Stewardship
• Postcolonialism and Indigenous Knowledge Systems
• Youth and Indigenous Entrepreneurship
• The Epistemological Bases of Indigenous Entrepreneurship
• Women, Youth, and Intergenerational Knowledge Transmission
• Decolonizing Development and the Role of Traditional Institutions
• Indigeneity and Neo-Capitalist Economic Practices
• Wise Practices in Health, Food Systems, and Cultural Heritage
• Indigenous Knowledges, Policy, Governance, and Rights-Based Approaches
• Innovation and Indigenous Technologies
• Diaspora, Identity, and Transnational Indigenous Knowledge Exchange
Submission Guidelines
• Abstracts: 200-250 words
• Deadline for Abstract Submission: September 30, 2025
• Notice of Acceptance of Abstract: October 30, 2025
• Deadline for Full Paper Submission: February 28, 2026
CFP and links to submit

09/16/2024
Call for Panels, Roundtables and PapersAfrica Indigenous Knowledge Research Network, Institute of African Studies, Carle...
07/29/2024

Call for Panels, Roundtables and Papers
Africa Indigenous Knowledge Research Network, Institute of African Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON Canada
Maiden Annual International Conference on Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Restorative Development in Africa
May 20-23, 2025, Entebbe, Uganda
Since gaining political independence in the late 1950s, African countries have experimented with different models of development from socialism and capitalism to mixed and outright market -oriented economies. As the seemingly elusive search for the most appropriate models of development continues on the continent, scholars have raised concern about the proper contextualization of development and whether Africa has even started the journey of development at all. This question arises because of the obvious mimicry of development models from other parts of the world especially the West.
At the root of the crisis of development in Africa is the extraversion in its epistemology, design and practice, which to a significant extent has been framed with little consideration given to the history of how pre-colonial African societies were organized on the based on their Indigenous knowledge systems. Despite the challenges associated with silencing and othering African Indigenous knowledges, they have shown resilience, and relevance as evidenced in the continued use of herbal medicine, application of the various Indigenous knowledges in livelihood and entrepreneurial activities, agriculture, cattle rearing, food preservation, climate adaption and migration. The extractive nature of the capitalist mode of production that underpins economic growth and development in Africa requires a shift in ways that can be restorative to the society, people and the environment. Beyond the targets contained in the UN Sustainable Development Goals is the need for restorative development. Restorative development transcends personal accumulation to include consideration for the plight of marginalized people, preservation of nature and the environment, leisure and rest, inter-group harmony and reconciliation.
African Indigenous knowledge systems include the insights, memories, culture, histories and practices of African people that they have applied to their livelihoods, entrepreneurship, governance institutions, growth, reconciliation and harmony, across different generations. As the search for restorative development continues, Africa Indigenous knowledge systems provide useful perspectives that cannot only contribute to addressing the challenges of unemployment, poverty, environmental degradation, climate change, and conflict resolution but provide complementary approaches to Western knowledges that continue to define development processes in Africa. The need to rethink development in a way that makes it restorative and more inclusive necessitates recentering it in academic and policy discourses on Indigenous knowledge. With focus on the potentials inherent in Africa Indigenous knowledge systems to foster theoretical and empirical rethinking in entrepreneurship, livelihood, arts and entertainment, sports, dance, spirituality and healing, herbal medicine, commerce and industry, climate change,

financial inclusion, natural resources governance, agriculture, traditional governance and institutions, scholars are invited to submit panels, roundtables and individual abstracts on any of the following areas:
Theoretical issues
Theorizing Indigenous knowledge
Africa Indigenous knowledge systems: Concepts and contexts Extraversion and Endogeneity in African Indigenous knowledge systems African Philosophy and Africa Indigenous knowledge systems
African Indigenous knowledge and cultural epistemology
African Indigenous knowledge and philosophy of education Endogenous knowledge and development
Empirical Issues
Indigenous knowledge and entrepreneurship
Indigenous knowledge and livelihoods
Indigenous knowledge and finance management
Indigenous knowledge and arts, music, dance and entertainment Indigenous knowledge and herbal medicine
Indigenous knowledge, plants and the environment Indigenous knowledge and natural resources governance Indigenous knowledge and climate change
Indigenous knowledge and governance
Indigenous knowledge and social organization
Indigenous Knowledge Systems and agricultural Indigenous Knowledge Systems and rural development
Methodological Issues
Approaches to conducting research in Indigenous communities Building trust in community research and managing expectations Navigating gatekeepers in community research
Data ownership and protection in community research Research and reporting back to Indigenous communities Indigenous knowledge and intellectual property rights
Gender and data collection in Indigenous communities
Customs, gifts and consent for research in Indigenous communities
Comparative Issues
Comparative Indigenous knowledge and entrepreneurship Comparative Indigenous knowledge and methodology Comparative Indigenous knowledge, innovation and technology Comparative Indigenous knowledge and herbal medicine

Comparative Indigenous knowledge and governance
The abstract which should be between 250-300 words should be sent to Laura Babika ([email protected]) with a copy to ([email protected]) no later than October 30, 2024. The conference will be organized as a hybrid and there are no registration fees. Authors whose papers are accepted after a rigorous peer review and who may not be able to afford the cost of participation may receive some support to travel to the conference. Members of the Africa Indigenous Knowledge Research Network, https://africaindigenousresearch.com/ especially students and early career scholars, will be given preference. Selected papers will be subjected to rigorous peer review and, if accepted, be published in edited book volumes and special editions of the AIKRN journals.

The Africa Indigenous Knowledge Research Network was created to undertake research geared towards identifying, recentering and harnessing Indigenous knowledges in Africa. It is aimed at foregrounding the authenticity of African Indigenous knowledges through co-creation, collaboration, partnership wi...

02/02/2024

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Ottawa, ON
K1S5B6

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