TY - JOUR
T1 - Ethical environmental, community, and research engagement in times of crisis
T2 - reflections from Cayambe, Ecuador
AU - Bittencourt, Tiago
AU - Sumida Huaman, Elizabeth
AU - Hoffman, Dewey Kk’ołeyo Putyuk
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - We use a critical incident from Indigenous educational fieldwork on global environmental shift with Kichwa—Indigenous communities in, Ecuador. A community leader’s question, “Who will replace you?” becomes a point of entry to reflect on the many dimensions of community engagement in interdisciplinary weather systems change research. We examine how guesthood and mink’a (obligatory community work) help reframe the roles and responsibilities of researchers working in remote, rural, and Indigenous territories experiencing environmental disruption. Rather than positioning collaboration as a supplement to scientific inquiry, we consider how community expectations around continuity, care, and accountability challenge extractive research paradigms and promote more durable and reciprocal forms of engagement. By attending to the temporal, structural, and epistemic tensions that shape these collaborations, we argue for an approach to research that is future-oriented, relationally-grounded, and responsive to the realities of people in places where land, weather, and water are inseparable from daily life.
AB - We use a critical incident from Indigenous educational fieldwork on global environmental shift with Kichwa—Indigenous communities in, Ecuador. A community leader’s question, “Who will replace you?” becomes a point of entry to reflect on the many dimensions of community engagement in interdisciplinary weather systems change research. We examine how guesthood and mink’a (obligatory community work) help reframe the roles and responsibilities of researchers working in remote, rural, and Indigenous territories experiencing environmental disruption. Rather than positioning collaboration as a supplement to scientific inquiry, we consider how community expectations around continuity, care, and accountability challenge extractive research paradigms and promote more durable and reciprocal forms of engagement. By attending to the temporal, structural, and epistemic tensions that shape these collaborations, we argue for an approach to research that is future-oriented, relationally-grounded, and responsive to the realities of people in places where land, weather, and water are inseparable from daily life.
KW - comparative Indigenous education research
KW - critical incident
KW - global environmental shift
KW - guesthood
KW - land and water
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105013864859
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105013864859#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1177/11771801251363186
DO - 10.1177/11771801251363186
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105013864859
SN - 1177-1801
VL - 21
SP - 522
EP - 532
JO - AlterNative
JF - AlterNative
IS - 3
ER -