![Worldwide collaboration aims to curb biodiversity decline, improve Indigenous peoples' health](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6318285.1642461041!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/ms-yanika-thamoon.jpg)
Worldwide collaboration aims to curb biodiversity decline, improve Indigenous peoples' health
CBC
A project based out of the University of Alberta aims to follow the wisdom of a Whapmagoostui Cree elder from Quebec — if the land is not healthy, how can we be?
To curb biodiversity decline and improve the health of Indigenous peoples, the Ărramăt Project is a collaboration of more than 150 Indigenous organizations and governments from around the world.
It aims to be Indigenous-led, combining traditional knowledge with Western scientific disciplines. The federal government recently awarded the six-year project $24 million in funding.
"Often you get Indigenous people around the world being looked to as activists or as traditional knowledge holders, you often don't have them as a core part of the research team," said Kim Tallbear, a professor in the faculty of Native studies at the University of Alberta and one of the collaborators in the study.
"I think this will appeal more to recruiting Indigenous people into research," Tallbear said on CBC Edmonton's Radio Active.
Tallbear organizes summer internships for Indigenous people in genomics — the study of a person's genes.
With the Ărramăt Project, she hopes to expand her training program into more remote communities for Indigenous students to learn lab science, making science more accessible.
"Indigenous people are place-based and we don't always want to move around the world."
The term Ărramăt describes a state of well-being shared by the environment, animals, and humans.
It comes from Tamasheq, an Indigenous language spoken by the Tuareg people whose ancestral lands include areas of Algeria, Burkina-Faso, Libya, Mali and Niger.
Tallbear said biodiversity and Indigenous peoples' health go hand in hand as many cultures depend on the land to survive.
About one million animals and plant species are threatened with extinction, many of which are expected to vanish within decades, according to a 2019 report used by the United Nations.
While Indigenous peoples make up less than five per cent of the world's population, approximately 80 per cent of biodiversity on Earth is on traditional Indigenous territories, according to an University of Alberta news release.
Restoring regulatory authority and scientific control to Indigenous peoples' over their traditional land, not only helps ecosystems, said Tallbear, but also restores cultural authority and vibrancy for Indigenous communities.