Item I1 - Kim TallBear

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Kim TallBear

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  • Sound recordings (electronic)

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CA ON0034 10-122-S1-F6-I1

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  • October 13, 2023 (Creation)

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1 sound recording (wav) : 1 h., 7 min., 43 sec.

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This is an interview with Dr. Kim TallBear, a professor in the Faculty of Native Studies at the University of Alberta. Dr. TallBear is a citizen of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate in present-day South Dakota and a descendant from the Cheyenne & Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma. She is also Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Peoples, Technoscience, and Society, and author of the book Native American DNA: Tribal Belonging and the False Promise of Genetic Science, published in 2013. After graduating from the Environmental Policy and Planning Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dr. TallBear began her career as an environmental planner, however, she eventually realized that her deeper intellectual interests were in the cultures and politics of science and technology, and their implications for Indigenous peoples. Currently, Dr. TallBear’s research focuses on how Indigenous peoples resist, regulate, collaborate in, and initiate research and technology development in ways that support Indigenous sovereignty and governance. The interviewer is Meghan Tibbits-Lamirande.
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Il s'agit d'un entretien avec Kim TallBear, professeur à la faculté d'études autochtones de l'université de l'Alberta. Mme TallBear est citoyenne de l'Oyate Sisseton-Wahpeton, dans l'actuel Dakota du Sud, et descendante des tribus Cheyenne et Arapaho de l'Oklahoma. Elle est également titulaire de la Chaire de recherche du Canada sur les peuples autochtones, la technoscience et la société, et auteur du livre Native American DNA : Tribal Belonging and the False Promise of Genetic Science, publié en 2013. Diplômée du programme de politique et de planification environnementales du Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Mme TallBear a commencé sa carrière en tant que planificatrice environnementale, mais elle a fini par se rendre compte que ses intérêts intellectuels les plus profonds concernaient les cultures et les politiques de la science et de la technologie, ainsi que leurs implications pour les peuples indigènes. Actuellement, les recherches de Mme TallBear portent sur la manière dont les peuples autochtones résistent, régulent, collaborent et initient la recherche et le développement technologique de manière à soutenir la souveraineté et la gouvernance autochtones. L'interviewer est Meghan Tibbits-Lamirande.

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Digital files were created during interviews conducted as part of the Women in STEM Oral History Project. Records were held on the main uOttawa Library Archives and Special Collections drive, before being designated for permanant preservation in January 2024.

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  • English

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    Digital preservation package ACC-2023-06

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    All rights remain with the University of Ottawa Library Archives and Special Collections. For copyright permissions contact Archives and Special Collections.

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