Nibi Water Gathering

May 23-26th are the dates for this year’s Nibi Gathering!

The 4-day Indigenous led gathering centres around Nibi Onje Biimaadiziwin (Water is life).

All are invited, so please stay tuned to the Facebook page to register.

NEW Nibi (Water) Curriculum for learners of all ages

A resource for water education and understanding our living connection and relationship to water stemming from the Treaty #3 Nibi Declaration

Treaty Promises: Rekindling Indigenous-Crown Land Relationships in Canada

A new 5 part series with Decolonizing Water’s Aimée Craft and the David Suzuki Foundation explores treaties. Watch and learn about treaty making, implementation, interpretation, Indigenous law, and the path forward.

In our Backyard:

Keeyask and the legacy of Hydroelectric development

New report

Governance Back: Exploring Indigenous Approaches to Reclaiming Relationships With Land

About Us

Decolonizing Water is an Indigenous-led partnership committed to enhancing the protection of water and Indigenous water governance. We engage in community-led research on water, including its ecological, socio-economic, cultural and spiritual dimensions.

For us, lands and water are not only sites of learning, but are also actively involved in the process of education.

team

 Our Team

Decolonizing Water is built on relationships and our strength is in our team. We are co-led by two co-leads, Aimée Craft and Deborah McGregor, who have extensive knowledge and experience in water law, Indigenous governance, and community-based research.

An all-Indigenous Council made up of five members, each bring unique knowledge and community ties to the project. Our Advisory Council brings together the voices of youth and Elders from different communities to guide our work.

We are also supported by a network of employees and students who contribute research and technical skills.

Community Engaged Research

Decolonizing Water approaches Indigenous community engaged and directed research by rooting our relationships in four core values: respect, responsibility, reciprocity and relevance. Through land-based learning, we seek to decolonize research and our relationships with the lands and waters.

Our project team uses the Ownership-Control-Access-Possession (OCAP) protocol.

Our community partners retain control of the information they share with us, and we follow their prescribed protocols for access and possession.

Resources

Our team has published a number of academic papers, journal articles, conference proceedings, videos, and books that share our research. Led by our Council, we are planning to publish a book summarizing the work undertaken throughout the lifetime of Decolonizing Water grant.

In addition to written publications, we produce a variety of audiovisual resources to share our work. Our goal in producing audiovisual content is to make the knowledge shared through Decolonizing Water as accessible as possible

Get Involved

Relationships are the foundation of Decolonizing Water. Please contact us if you are interested in building a partnership or learning more about our work.