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      Academic research and knowledge repatriation at the intersection of epistemic and environmental justice in the Caribbean

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          Abstract

          Researchers from institutions of higher education who conduct studies in the Caribbean often rely on local knowledge and support to produce scientific publications that could inform resource management. However, such research remains largely inaccessible to local communities because of the proprietary nature of the current knowledge ecosystem in academia. This commentary proposes knowledge repatriation as a means of advancing decolonial research efforts within higher education. First, we highlight the intersecting features of epistemic and environmental (in)justice with examples from the Caribbean context and discuss how knowledge repatriation efforts can counter extant environmental and epistemological exploitative practices. Second, we identify how academic institutions are specially positioned to challenge traditional research practices and advance knowledge repatriation. Third, we explore one example of how knowledge repatriation can unfold within a Caribbean context and some related challenges.

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          Theorising environmental justice: the expanding sphere of a discourse

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            If We Share Data, Will Anyone Use Them? Data Sharing and Reuse in the Long Tail of Science and Technology

            Research on practices to share and reuse data will inform the design of infrastructure to support data collection, management, and discovery in the long tail of science and technology. These are research domains in which data tend to be local in character, minimally structured, and minimally documented. We report on a ten-year study of the Center for Embedded Network Sensing (CENS), a National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center. We found that CENS researchers are willing to share their data, but few are asked to do so, and in only a few domain areas do their funders or journals require them to deposit data. Few repositories exist to accept data in CENS research areas.. Data sharing tends to occur only through interpersonal exchanges. CENS researchers obtain data from repositories, and occasionally from registries and individuals, to provide context, calibration, or other forms of background for their studies. Neither CENS researchers nor those who request access to CENS data appear to use external data for primary research questions or for replication of studies. CENS researchers are willing to share data if they receive credit and retain first rights to publish their results. Practices of releasing, sharing, and reusing of data in CENS reaffirm the gift culture of scholarship, in which goods are bartered between trusted colleagues rather than treated as commodities.
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              Decolonization is not a metaphor

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                The Geographical Journal
                Geographical Journal
                Wiley
                0016-7398
                1475-4959
                December 2023
                March 31 2023
                December 2023
                : 189
                : 4
                : 666-673
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Wake Forest University Winston‐Salem North Carolina USA
                Article
                10.1111/geoj.12516
                3a5d92e1-590d-418b-8b7b-381deb6a7f36
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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