精东视频

Academy celebrates Indigenous Knowledges during NAIDOC Week

July 06, 2022

Associate Professor Bradley Moggridge received the from the 精东视频 in 2019.

The award supported Associate Professor Moggridge, a PhD candidate at the University of Canberra, to visit Aotearoa/New Zealand to learn how they have incorporated M膩ori culture and knowledge into their water management practices.

As a result of the award and the visit to Aotearoa, Associate Professor Moggridge recently published a paper (as first author) about Indigenous Methodologies and engagement in water management in the journal .

The Academy spoke with him for NAIDOC Week.

In 2019 you were among the first people to receive the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Scientist Travelling Research Award [now the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Scientist Award]. How did this help achieve your research goals?

鈥淭hat was a great honour, especially getting that little blue tube with a certificate in it, with the Academy鈥檚 logo on it 鈥 that was cool. The presentation and the celebration of that, you sort of think, well after all the challenges and all the setbacks you鈥檝e had, you know, this journey鈥檚 been worth it, just by winning such an award. And then obviously the cash component helped me travel to New Zealand.

鈥淸The award] allowed me to talk to M膩ori on both the South and North Island, and it was amazing to see them and be with them on country, and there were little things 鈥 I was talking with one of the Iwi on the South Island and I said, 鈥業鈥檝e got this ethics document, you need to sign it鈥. She said 'I invited you to my bloody house. I'm not signing no ethics document.鈥

鈥淎 lot of their challenges are still the same as Aboriginal people in Australia. I think I talk about it in the paper, they鈥檝e got their [treaty] settlements and they鈥檝e got land and their compensation, but when it comes to water, [for example] the Waikato River is fully allocated, and the Waikato Tainui are restricted in entering the water market as it鈥檚 fully allocated, it鈥檚 a real challenge for them. The Te Arawa in Rotorua, they got the rights to seven or eight lakes, but they only got the rights to the lake beds. So, they don鈥檛 actually have the rights to the water.

鈥淐onnecting and [establishing] those networks for me are 鈥 Well, I try and maintain them, and I hope they鈥檙e forever. We help each other, we learn off each other and we share.鈥

What inspired you to study water management?

鈥淸I found] connecting with water in general and science was exciting, because really what I was finding was that Indigenous knowledge 鈥 some of the oldest water stories on the planet that have been shared and passed down from generation to generation 鈥 have survived colonisation and policy and invasion and everything else.

鈥淲ater is always going to be very topical in Australia [鈥 those thousands of generations of existence and survival wouldn鈥檛 have been possible without the knowledge of water, especially around where to find it, what time of year it was available, what were the indicators that suggested water was in the landscape on your country.

鈥淭hose stories existed, like the stories of moving to higher country when the sea level was rising at the end of the last ice age 鈥 those stories survive 鈥 stories of volcanism in Western Victoria 鈥 and they are stories of observation and experience.鈥

Your research explores those principles of co-designed science land and water rights and data sovereignty, which are hugely important for 精东视频. How can other researchers apply those principles?

鈥淭rust should be at the core 鈥 building that trust with communities, especially if you are going to engage in a research activity. And as you move through that partnership, protocols and the research agreement come out, you鈥檝e got to go through ethics, but it鈥檚 then when you get down to the nitty gritty 鈥 how are you going to protect their intellectual property and what鈥檚 in it for them if they engage with you?

鈥淪o many researchers have got PhDs and masters and higher degrees by research from Aboriginal knowledge, and the Aboriginal people don鈥檛 get acknowledged. They鈥檙e not a co-author 鈥 they might get in the acknowledgement section or a personal communication as part of the research, but it鈥檚 their knowledge, but they鈥檙e not actually acquitted that right. You know what I mean?

鈥淏ecause that鈥檚 what past generations got tired of, they鈥檇 tell their story and then all of a sudden, they lose the intellectual property to it. And now it鈥檚 a PhD, or it鈥檚 a story in a book, and I think modern-day researchers will find that those barriers are there.

鈥淪o, they鈥檝e gotta break down those barriers to start those conversations. And my tip to a lot of researchers is the three Ts: TIME to build TRUST over lots of cups of TEA. And I have been advised that there is a fourth and fifth, you鈥檝e got to have TIM TAMS.

鈥淎nd then get to the point where your research might be able to answer their questions. No one鈥檚 ever asked them, 鈥榳hat are your questions you want answered?鈥 No one鈥檚 asked that [鈥 that鈥檚 why I wanted to write this [Indigenous] research methodology paper.

鈥淐limate change is a great example, or fire ecology, a great example of knowledge coming together with traditional knowledge, with Western science, and you鈥檙e getting a positive outcome because of that. In that regard you hope it鈥檚 either Indigenous led or co-led, and then you start seeing the benefits.鈥

You are on the Academy鈥檚 Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) Working Group, and have been involved in other institutions work around reconciliation. What successes have you seen, and what would you most like to see next in the journey?

鈥淪eeing Tom [Calma] as a Fellow of the Academy was exciting. And Jason Sharples is a Fellow of the Academy of Technology and Engineering, and Marcia [Langton] is an honorary Fellow. So those changes just there are significant. And then obviously seeing the Academy of Science鈥檚 Reconciliation Action Plan, it鈥檚 advancing and it鈥檚 doing good things. Having the [Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Scientist Award] increase in value, and some of the Fellows contributing to that and wanting longevity into the future is exciting. And that鈥檚 a real change.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing things happen, it鈥檚 starting to become normal. And that鈥檚 the aim of it is that you don鈥檛 have to be pushed to do it, you just do it. And I think that鈥檚 where the M膩ori are at because a lot of things just happen now: dual language is always everywhere and non-M膩ori people, P膩keh膩, they actually have a connection to a mountain and a river as well 鈥 the M膩ori story. So that鈥檚 where you want to be.

鈥淚 think the next one for me is for a number of years trying to push an Indigenous STEM network [鈥 We鈥檙e hopefully going to have a gathering at the end of the year (2022). Eventually, we鈥檒l build up and have support from universities and the academies, to actually network, get together, share support, mentor 鈥 all of those things that other networks do. There鈥檚 an Aboriginal dentist society 鈥 how have they got one and scientists don鈥檛? But that鈥檚 all volunteering: It鈥檚 all after hours and behind the scenes on top of your work. Leaving our effort in demand and business unfinished, help a brother out Get up! Step up! Stand up!

To hear more from Associate Professor Moggridge and other Indigenous scientists, join our special NAIDOC Week webinar 鈥楨mbracing Indigenous Knowledges in STEM鈥, hosted by Academy Fellow Professor Tom Calma AO FAA on Thursday 7 July. .

The 2024 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Scientist Award will open in early 2023.

The 精东视频 is committed to supporting excellence in science and empowering the next generation of scientists. This includes advancing reconciliation, creating opportunities to work respectfully with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, supporting their contribution to scientific activities, and increasing understandings of Indigenous knowledge. Learn more about our progress towards reconciliation.

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