Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance
"Data are not a foreign concept in the Indigenous world. Indigenous peoples 'have always been data creators, data users, and data stewards. Data were and are embedded in Indigenous instructional practices and cultural principles.'"
–Stephanie Russo Carroll
Concerned by the current state of the data available for tribal and community decision making--including census, health, social services, and environment--and by Native nation’s limited control over their data, NNI researchers and a network of colleagues and collaborators are addressing the need for tribes to drive their data agendas through practicing Indigenous data sovereignty and governing their information. Indigenous data sovereignty is the right of a nation to govern the collection, ownership, and application of its own data. It derives from tribes' inherent right to govern their peoples, lands, and resources.
Learn more about this work at the
Collaboratory for Indigenous Data Governance website.
Select Publications & Projects
Presentations & Interviews
Science Seminar: Implementing the CARE Principles in Open Data Repositories
'Indigenous Data Sovereignty: How Researchers can Empower Data Governance' with Lydia Jennings
Indigenous Data Sovereignty: The CARE Principles and the Biocultural Labels Initiative
Transforming Big Data for Indigenous Futures Webinar