Decolonizing Indigenous Drinking Water Challenges and Implications: Focusing on Indigenous Water Governance and Sovereignty

Author:

Hurlbert Margot1ORCID,Acharibasam John Bosco2ORCID,Datta Ranjan2ORCID,Strongarm Sharon3,Starblanket Ethel3

Affiliation:

1. Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy, University of Regina, Regina, SK S4P 4V5, Canada

2. Department of Humanities, Mount Royal University, Calgary, AB T3E 6K6, Canada

3. Star Blanket Cree Nation, # 83, 83A, P.O. Box 456, Balcarres, SK S0G 0C0, Canada

Abstract

Indigenous Peoples in Canada have shown great strength and resilience in maintaining their cultures and ways of life to date in the face of settler colonialism. Centering the Water crises within Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination, we explore the impacts these crises have on community members. Particularly, the continuous failure of the Canadian government to end the Water crises in remote Indigenous communities, Star Blanket Cree Nation, is investigated in this paper. What implications have these Water governance gaps had on Indigenous Peoples’ sovereignty and self-determination? We adopted an Indigenist theoretical framework to guide the study. Additionally, a community-based participatory research approach was adopted. To achieve our research goals of investigating the implications of the current Water crises for Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination, specific methods of sharing circles were used to gather knowledge from community members, Elders, and knowledge keepers. The research findings strongly highlight the strength and resilience shown by remote Indigenous communities in the face of the current Water crises and continuous government failure. Solving the current Water crises will involve remote Indigenous communities taking charge of their own Water governance through Indigenous-led Water governance systems. Additionally, taking steps to rebuild trust through genuine reconciliation will be key. Therefore, listening to remote Indigenous communities and taking collaborative action are fundamental.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference73 articles.

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2. Woods, J. (2021). Tip of the Iceberg: The True State of Drinking Water Advisories in First Nations, The Canadian Press. Available online: https://ucalgary.ca/news/tip-iceberg-true-state-drinking-Water-advisories-first-nations.

3. McDonald, K., Yenilmez, S., Roote, K., Karim, N., Shah, S., Villenueve, L., and Wu, J. (2024, February 20). Lack of Clean Drinking Water in Indigenous Communities. Available online: https://www.theindigenousfoundation.org/articles/lack-of-clean-drinking-water-in-indigenous-communities.

4. The Saskatchewan First Nations Water Association Inc (2023, April 24). The Current Status of Drinking Water Advisories. Available online: https://sfnwa.ca/ournews#:~:text=The%20Current%20Status%20of%20Drinking%20Water%20Advisories&text=As%20of%20February%208%2C%202023,in%20Saskatchewan%20First%20Nations%20communities.

5. Stelter, R. (2023). STELTER: Canadian Governments Have Repeatedly Failed Indigenous People, When Will Things Change?, The Winnipeg Sun. Available online: https://winnipegsun.com/opinion/columnists/stelter-canadian-governments-have-repeatedly-failed-Indigenous-People-when-will-things-change.

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