INSTEAD

Indigenous Stewardship of Environment and Alternative Development

In the face of climate change and biodiversity loss, the INSTEAD research program works to protect Indigenous collective
life projects and recognize their vision for the future. In partnership with Indigenous communities and organizations in
Quebec, Canada, and Latin America, the team conducts participatory research to contribute to the development of
territories of life—areas conserved and protected by Indigenous peoples and local communities—on the American continent.

Our program aims to create links between the communities involved in our research activities, while encouraging the
transformation of academic practices in order to drive profound changes in legal, political, and policy institutions.
Indigenous conceptions of well-being play a central role in these life projects in that they offer a concrete
alternative to development models based on economic growth and neoliberalism. These relational ontologies, which include
all communities of life beyond humans, form the ethical and philosophical basis of these worldviews.

The program currently includes fifteen co-researchers from eight Quebec institutions and fifteen collaborators working
with thirteen Indigenous nations and seven organizations fighting to defend their territories and secure recognition of
their rights. Their strategies for promoting the prosperity of living territories are based on four interdependent areas: life projects and relational ontologies, resilient livelihoods, conservation governance, Indigenous law and interlegalities.

Concerted action across these four areas is essential to the vitality of territories of life. Building on long-term
partnerships between Indigenous representatives, researchers, and community members, INSTEAD works to create synergies
between research findings, field practices, and concrete policy proposals to support the actions of these partners.

 

Issues common to all partners include extractivist pressures and their effects on the balance between conservation and
self-determined development (particularly in the energy sector), the promotion of livelihoods linked to land and
waterways, the intergenerational and inclusive transmission of knowledge, and the legal and institutional frameworks
relating to treaty-making, the protection of rights, and free, prior, and informed consent.

Our methodology is based on participatory knowledge co-production, supported by INSTEAD’s network of inter-community
alliances. Comparative learning across diverse cultural, economic, and geographic contexts takes place through exchanges
at multiple levels: community workshops, group discussions, and interregional meetings. The team uses multimodal,
visual, sensory, and cartographic tools to document and disseminate knowledge within and between communities.

Our innovations in collaborative research promote exchanges, awareness, and the creation of alliances between
communities, thereby amplifying INSTEAD’s impact in protecting and implementing a vision of the future based on thriving
and sustainable territories of life.

INSTEAD Indigenous Partner
Groups

INSTEAD researchers work with
communities and organizations from all of the above peoples.

INSTEAD Research Projects

ProjectProject LeaderYear
“The James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement (JBNQA): The First 50 Years”, co-organized by CICADA/INSTEAD and the Société Recherches autochtones au Québec (SRAQ).

Émile Duchesne (co-investigator), Colin Scott

2025
‘Counter-colonial Relationalities – Festschrift for Harvey Feit’ Colloquium.Émile Duchesne, Jasmin Habib, and Colin Scott (co-organized, chairs)2025
‘Treaty-making and its Alternatives, 50 years after the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement,’ Annual Meeting of the Canadian Anthropology Society/Société canadienne d’anthropologie, (CASCA), ‘Confluences’.Émile Duchesne, Jasmin Habib, and Colin Scott (co-organized, chairs)2025
Indigenous Peoples, Climate Justice, and Action Research in the Americas Conference.Viviane Weitzner (co-investigator),2023
Intelegalities Conference and Workshop in Morelia, Mexico. Encounterings: Collaborative methodologies, legal pluralities and struggles for self-determination in the Americas.Kirsten Anker, Étienne Roy-Grégoire and Viviane Weitzner (co-investigators)2023
Shaputan Innu Educational Program by the Tshakapesh Institute: Sous le Shaputuan, la rencontre Québecois-Autochtones.Peter Johansen (former co-investigator)2023
ASOMI Women’s Network (Association of Indigenous Women) – Weaving Alliances in Defense of Territory. A conversation on the issue of mining exploration, specifically by the company Libero Copper in Putumayo, Colombia.Iván Vargas (collaborator)2023
Collaboration between OPIAC and Indigenous filmmaker Maria Kuiru to produce a short film titled “Sowing the Word to Harvest Life: Strengthening Indigenous Communities in Putumayo through Cinema.”Camilo Gómez (collaborator)2023
Ecuadorian delegation to conduct interviews with Manari Ushigua, a forest defender, traditional healer and spiritual and political leader of the Sápara Nation in the Amazon Ecuadorian.Eduardo Kohn (co-investigator)2022
“Putting the House in Order”: Toward the Development of Indigenous Mechanisms for the Reaffirmation and Territorial Planning of the Colonial-Era Indigenous Reserve of Cañamomo Lomaprieta (Colombia) and the Establishment of an Interlegal System.Viviane Weitzner (co-investigator)2022
Translation work from French to Atikamekw for the Atikamekw Kinokewin website (The Living Atikamekw Memory), created with the Atikamekw Nation Council and launched in 2013. The site was reviewed, enhanced, and migrated to a new platform in 2021–2022.Sylvie Poirier (former co-investigator)2022
Masko Cimakanic Aski protected area: documenting and strengthening Atikamekw occupation of their ancestral lands.Daviken Studnicki-Gizbert (former co-investigator)2022
Seminar and Workshops on Indigenous Mapping Creation: Designed to mobilize and disseminate knowledge related to Indigenous participatory mapping, equipping Indigenous participants with the skills to develop and implement their own mapping projects.Benoit Éthier (co-investigator)2021
Indigenous Medicine of the Northeast Sierra de Puebla, by Tosepan Pajti.Pierre Beaucage (co-investigator)2021
Xatastujut Tekit – Work Time, documentary on the traditional practices of tending to the Melipona bees that are native to the region. in Sierra Norte de Puebla, Mexico. In August of 2022, the film screened at the Présence Autochtone film festival in Montreal.Pierre Beaucage (co-investigator) and Evodia Silva-Rivera (collaborator)2021
The Yshir History in the Territory Told from the Schools by the Younger GenerationsMario Blaser (collaborator)2021
Translation of the Political Ecology Reader. *The article connects a growing body of specific literature, the political ecology of conservation, to the main conceptual components emerging from political anthropology and geography (sources of legitimacy, governmentality, territoriality, or state making), political economy (commoditization, market integration, niche markets, or gentrification), and cultural studies of the environment (cultural transformations of nature, cultural heritage and landscapes, taste, and identity politics).Ismael Vaccaro (former co-investigator)2021
Workshops in Guatemala with Marlin Mine affected communities to explain case at the Federal Court on Canadian economic diplomacy and Marlin Mine, and for staff time to compile a report that systematizes community access to justice efforts.Charis Kamphuis (former collaborator)2021
Seminar at Mushuau Nipi: The Challenges of Implementing Impact and Benefit Agreements.Thierry Rodon (former co-investigator)2020
Perspectives on Food Sovereignty: A Case Study of Collaborative Action Research in Kahnawake. A food sovereignty leadership programme started by the First Nations Regional Adult Education Centre of Kahnawake (FNRAEC), and SymBioSyn, a student-led non-profit.Treena Delormier (former co-investigator)2019
Mapping Back Network: Cartographies Against Extractivism.Sebastien Caquard (former co-investigator), Monica Mulrennan (co-investigator), Brian Thom (collaborator)2018
Protected Areas Development and Environmental Stewardship, Eeyou IstcheeColin Scott (PI)2018
Indigenous Engagements with Mining in Canada and GuatemalaKarine Vanthuyne (collaborator)2018
Documenting the Work of the Consejo para la Protección y Preservación de la Ceremonia Ritual de VoladoresEvodia Silva (collaborator)2018
Documenting Oral History of Development in the Comarca Ngäbe-Buglé, PanamaDaviken Studnicki-Gizbert (former co-investigator)2018
Community Video as Tool of Territorial Defense in Urracá District, PanamaDaviken Studnicki-Gizbert (former co-investigator)2018