Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage project
The Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage Project is a seven-year international research initiative based at Simon Fraser University, in British Columbia, Canada. IPinCH's work explores the rights, values, and responsibilities of material culture, cultural knowledge, and the practice of heritage research. The project is directed by Dr., co-developed with Julie Hollowell and Kelly Bannister and is funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada's major collaborative research initiatives program.
IPinCH is an international collaboration of scholars, students, heritage professionals, community members, policy makers, and Indigenous organizations. The Research Team includes fifty-one leading scholars and professionals, one hundred and three Associates, sixteen Fellows, and thirty partnering organizations, representing Canada, Australia, United States, New Zealand, Italy, Japan, South Africa, Germany, and Switzerland. The project's organizational partners range from the World Intellectual Property Organization, to Parks Canada, to Indigenous groups including the Penobscot Nation of Maine and the Moriori of Rekohu.
The project serves as both a practical resource and a network of support for communities and researchers engaged in cultural heritage work. Topics of research include the theoretical, ethical, and practical implications of commodification, appropriation, and other about the past, and how these may affect communities, researchers, and other stakeholders.
Purpose
Project Description
The 7-year project began in 2008 with a $2.5 million grant from the Major Collaborative Research Initiatives program of Canada's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. About one-fourth of the project budget is reserved for student fellowships and research support, and one-fourth for community-based heritage research for case studies related to the project themes.The IPinCH project initially had three components:
- Community Initiatives
- Working Groups
- Knowledge Base
Community-based Initiatives / Special Initiatives
IPinCH values a collaborative approach and employs Community-Based Participatory Research methods that engage the community in all aspects of the research process. In the CBIs, communities determine the research goals, which form for the foundation for the initiative, including the practical and theoretical outputs. After community review, the results of these initiatives will be made available to partner organizations and stakeholders, in order to assist them in refining their own policies and approaches.Key features of a CBPR methodology include:
- A collaborative approach that engages the community or organization in all aspects of the research process—from development of research questions and research design to conducting the research, designing outputs, and disseminating results;
- Research goals that prioritize community needs and result in direct community benefits;
- Projects that contribute to community capacity building and to sustainable and more equitable relations between the community and outside researchers, promote respect for local values, and address mistrust, inequity, and similar issues in conventional research.
- A Case of Access: Inuvialuit Engagement with the Smithsonian's MacFarlane Collection
This case study focuses on the differences between Hopi notions of navoti and Euro-American understandings of intellectual property, and the implications of this difference in terms of managing cultural knowledge resources. This case study is working towards developing an official cultural heritage management guide for the Hopi Cultural Preservation Office and the Hopi Tribe.
- Yukon First Nations Heritage Values and Heritage Resource Management
Special Initiatives
- Special Initiative —
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- Special Initiative —
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Research Themes
Integrating research findings and knowledge from our Community-Based Initiatives and other sources, the IPinCH Research Themes explore unique questions relating to intellectual property and heritage. Each group is led by at least two team members, as Research Theme Co-Chairs. Membership in these groups is open to all associated students, partnering organization representatives, co-investigators, associates, collaborators, research assistants, steering committee members, and community representatives.- Commodifications of Cultural Heritage
- Community-Based Cultural Heritage Research
Awards and recognitions
The Intellectual Property Issues has been the recipient of numerous notable awards and recognitions:2007 Major Collaborative Research Initiative Grant awarded for "Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage: Theory, Practice, Policy, and Ethics". Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council2013 Connections Grant for "Indigenous Peoples, Cultural Commodifications, and Self-Determination." Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.2013 Partnership Impact Award for "Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage Project." Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council2015 Connections Grant for "Exploring the Construction of Identity at the Interface of Biology and Culture." Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council- ''2015 Simon Fraser University President's Dream Colloquium Award for "Protecting Indigenous Cultural Heritage: Emergent Policy and Practice"''