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Indigenous Data Sovereignty - Coggle Diagram
Indigenous Data Sovereignty
foundation of sovereignty
tribal sovereignty: tribal nations are recognized as sovereign governments that stand shoulder-to-shoulder with federal and state governments
government to government relationship: : This unique relationship is established through hundreds of treaties, executive orders, statutes, and judicial decisions
indigenous data governance frameworks (CARE principles)
collective benefit
c1: for inclusive development and innovation
c2: for improved governance and citizen engagement
c3: for equitable outcomes
authority to control
a1: recognizing rights and interest
free, prior, and informed consent
a2: data for governance
a3: governance of data
developing cultural protocols
responsibility
r1: for positive relationships
built on trust and reciprocity
r2: for expanding capability and capacity
data literacy, indigenous data workforce
r3: for indigenous language and worldviews
ethics
e1: for minimizing harm and maxmizing benefit
e2: for justice
e3: for future use
core implementation challenges
relational accountability
it is critical for rebuilding institutional trust
institutional trust
ownership complexity
goals and outcome
protecting knowledge integrity
nation rebuilding
Governing tribal data enhances planning, evaluation, and engagement, thereby strengthening the tribe’s capacity for self-governance
indigenous data definition
data impacting Indigenous Peoples includes information about them as individuals, non-human relations, and as collectives