Indigenous Peoples, Data Sovereignty, and Self-Determination: Current
Realities and Imperatives
Chidi Oguamanam
Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa; Senior Fellow, Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), Waterloo, Canada; and Steering Committee Member,
Open African Innovation Research (Open AIR) network
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4301-9388
Abstract
This study explores the current state and dynamics of the global Indigenous data
sovereignty movement—the movement pressing for Indigenous peoples to have full
control over the collection and governance of data relating to their lived realities.
The article outlines the movement’s place within the broader push for Indigenous
self-determination; examines its links to big data, open data, intellectual property
rights, and access and benefit-sharing; details a pioneering assertion of data sovereignty by Canada’s First Nations; outlines relevant UN and international civil society
processes; and examines the nascent movement in Africa. The study identifies a fundamental tension between the objectives of Indigenous data sovereignty and those
of the open data movement, which does not directly cater for Indigenous peoples’
full control over their data. The study also identifies the need for African Indigenous
peoples to become more fully integrated into the global Indigenous data sovereignty
movement.
Keywords
Indigenous peoples, data, data sovereignty, self-determination, decolonisation,
research, data collection, big data, open data, open science, access and benefit sharing
(ABS), intellectual property (IP), UN, UNDRIP, CARE principles, FAIR principles,
international, CANZUS, Africa
Acknowledgements
The author thanks University of Ottawa JD student Kelsea Gillespie for research
assistance, and the multiple anonymous peer reviewers for their inputs. The author also
thanks the internal reviewers at the Centre for International Governance Innovation
(CIGI). This article was written as part of the author’s participation in the Open African
Innovation Research (Open AIR) network. Open AIR is a partnership between the
University of Cape Town, the University of Johannesburg, Strathmore University in
Nairobi, the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, The American University
in Cairo, and the University of Ottawa. The author acknowledges the support currently
provided to Open AIR by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
(SSHRC) of Canada and the International Development Research Centre (IDRC).
This article draws on elements from Oguamanam (2018; 2019).
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.23962/10539/30360
Recommended citation
Oguamanam, C. (2020). Indigenous peoples, data sovereignty, and self-determination: Current realities and imperatives. The African Journal of Information and
Communication (AJIC), 26, 1-20. https://doi.org/10.23962/10539/30360
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) licence:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
1. Introduction
International policy endeavours in support of the world’s Indigenous peoples are
framed around advancing active Indigenous participation in development pursuits
within culturally respectful frameworks. The overarching objectives of these endeavours are geared towards Indigenous self-determination and mechanisms for measuring progress towards this self-determination (see Oguamanam, 2004). Colonial and
post-colonial settler states and unitary states have tended, in service to their vested
interests, to turn questions of Indigenous self-determination into sites of interminable interpretational somersaulting and foot-dragging (see Dalton, 2005).
In recent years, however, there has been a shift towards more encouraging state efforts to make space for the emergence of self-determined Indigenous development
in diverse spheres pursuant to decolonisation and anti-racist agendas. This article
focuses on a key element of this trend: the global Indigenous data sovereignty movement, which is pressing for all Indigenous peoples to have full control over the collection and governance of data relating to their communities. The next section sets
out Indigenous data sovereignty’s conceptual and practical elements, including its
interfaces with big data and open data, and its links to matters of intellectual property and access and benefit sharing. The article then moves on to examine a pioneering
realisation of data sovereignty, in respect of health information, by Canada’s First
Nations, followed by an outline of international responses and processes, including
the strong role being played by Indigenous peoples in the CANZUS states (Canada,
Australia, New Zealand, United States), and conjecture on Africa’s place in the global
Indigenous data sovereignty movement.
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2. Conceptual and practical context
Indigenous data sovereignty
Data sovereignty denotes the right of states, in relation to other states or entities, “to
govern the collection and ownership [of data], including access and use of data that
is domiciled within their jurisdiction” (Oguamanam, 2018, p. 207). Data sovereignty,
as an idea, is the assumption of responsibility to ensure that information is managed
in ways “consistent with the laws, practices, and customs of the nation-state in which
it is located” (Snipp, 2016, p. 39). Taking into consideration the sophistication of
current technological interventions in data generation and storage, as well as the
complex chains of data migration and data valourisation, it can now be persuasively
argued that data sovereignty extends to the interest of states in the sanctity, integrity,
and security of data—and of the cultural and other contextual sensitivity associated
with data. In the words of Schultz and Rainie (2014, p. 1), “[d]ata is intimately linked
to the sovereignty and self-determination of all nations”.
Under colonial, neo-colonial, and unitary national frameworks, Indigenous peoples
have had a troubled relationship with how data concerning them is generated,
accessed, shared, applied, and owned. The data has typically been owned by the state
in which Indigenous peoples are embedded, or by other non-Indigenous actors,
particularly researchers and corporations. Indigenous peoples and their political
entities have only comparatively recently begun staking their claims in the data space,
as part of their quest for greater self-determination and, in the settler CANZUS
states, as part of the broader decolonisation project (see, for example, Open North &
BCFNDGI, 2017).
Indigenous peoples lament that they have been “researched to death”, resulting in
an extensive trail of abuses and victimisation in research contexts (see American
Indian Law Centre, 1999; Blair, 2015; Goodman et al., 2018; Porro et al., 2015).
Research is a systemic exercise in gathering and using information to arrive at
specific conclusions for the advancement of knowledge and the making of policy.
The default until relatively recently was that Indigenous peoples were passive objects
and subjects of research funded by non-Indigenous entities and often conducted by
academic researchers who may have had complicit relationships with corporations
and other institutional actors in the data-generating space. Indigenous peoples did
not set the research agendas, as those were predetermined without consultation
or without their free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC). One particularly stark
example of Indigenous peoples being framed as passive research subjects was the
Human Genome Diversity Project, in which the research initially, before protests
emerged from Indigenous and other activists, intended to extract human genetic
material from Indigenous communities without their informed consent (see Amani
& Coombe, 2005). Sterling (2011), Santos (2008), and Brower (1997) have also shed
light on the abuse of Indigenous peoples in human genetic research.
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The undergirding development paradigm and framing of issues in research and data
generation relating to Indigenous peoples have typically been culturally insensitive
and delivered in top-down, prescriptive modalities. Knowledge arising from research
has been valourised as a capitalist proprietary enterprise because “[t]here is no law or
concept in Western society that recognizes inherent community rights and interests
in data and information” (FNIGC, 2016, p. 141). Until recently, rarely did the
importance of the interface between personal and collective or community agency
resonate in non-Indigenous research paradigms. Furthermore, given the small size of
many Indigenous communities, their demographic statistics were seldom reflected in
national surveys (Schultz & Rainie, 2014).
Indigenous peoples are unequivocal that prevailing architectures for research
and data generation in their territories have generally been ill-suited to their
development aspirations and contradict their objectives of self-determination and
self-governance.1 While there have been significant efforts to treat research involving
Indigenous peoples as a sui generis category (see Government of Canada, 2018), and
to adjust institutional review and ethical clearance procedures to this end, matters
of collecting, processing, and publishing data on or from Indigenous people are still
often negotiated from non-Indigenous perspectives, without tackling questions of
cultural sensitivity, sovereignty, and self-determination (Harding et al., 2012).
The Indigenous data sovereignty movement seeks to rectify the relationship between
Indigenous peoples and Indigenous data. As Rainie et al. (2019) write,
[Indigenous data sovereignty] refers to the right of Indigenous peoples to
govern the collection, ownership, and application of data about Indigenous
communities, peoples, lands, and resources. Indigenous data is […] data in
a wide variety of formats inclusive of digital data and data as knowledge
and information. It encompasses data, information, and knowledge about
Indigenous individuals, collectives, entities, lifeways, cultures, lands, and resources. (Rainie et al. 2019, p. 301)
In the words of the Global Indigenous Data Alliance (GIDA, n.d.),
While the term Indigenous Data Sovereignty is relatively new, Indigenous
Peoples have always been data collectors and knowledge holders. The
rise of national Indigenous Data Sovereignty networks reflects a growing
global concern about the need to protect against the misuse of Indigenous
data and to ensure Indigenous Peoples are the primary beneficiaries of their
data. (GIDA, n.d.)
1 For a comprehensive literature review of Indigenous peoples’ troubled experiences with the conduct
of research, see Ermine et al. (2004).
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Misuse of Indigenous data strikes at the core of the ability of Indigenous peoples
to exercise their rights to self-determination. Authentic data can drive policy
formulation, decision-making, mapping of development aspirations, problem-solving,
and other calculations critical to Indigenous empowerment for development in a
range of fields. These fields include education, language, finance, health, medicine,
agriculture, environmental stewardship, community membership, lands, resources,
artworks, rituals, ceremonies, cultural expressions, creativity, and innovation.
Big data and open data
Big data is massive-volume, high-velocity and high-variety information assets
(Corrales et al., 2017; Lefèvre, 2018) on a scale beyond the capacity of conventional
or isolated data processing applications, and convertible into diverse and far-reaching
uses by powerfully endowed entities. Those entities, which include governments
and large private-sector actors, are capable of using a wide variety of high-tech
advancements to exploit big data. Meanwhile, open data approaches to big data are
part of the “openness or open access movement and its continuing metamorphosis
as a malleable approach toward enhancing the flow of information, reducing the
costs of its access and optimizing its public impact in contrast to a closed proprietary
approach” (Oguamanam, 2018).
Big data and open data have “a nuanced relationship” (Oguamanam, 2018, p. 200),
in that they “are constructive and modified forms of proprietary [i.e., exclusive and
commercial] use of data in self-interested ways that strategically [encourage] target
forms of sharing via licencing or related schemes to optimize value” (Oguamanam,
2018, pp. 199–200). They are phenomena that each—and sometimes in combination—
have the potential to be beneficial to Indigenous data sovereignty. For example, open
data, with or without big data, can allow Indigenous peoples to engage in shared or
collaborative uses of data across geographically dispersed nations and communities.
Yet at the same time, big and open data phenomena reflect the complex interests and
divergent stakeholders that operate in the data space, and those interests tend to be
aligned neither with Indigenous peoples nor with the raison d’être of Indigenous data
sovereignty. Clearly, “[t]he global data revolution and associated new technologies
can be a double-edged sword for indigenous peoples if the values and principles of
indigenous data sovereignty are not respected” (Open North & BCFNDGI, 2017, p.
7). What is often not mentioned is that, for reasons of sacralisation and other cultural
considerations, not all forms of information or knowledge relating to Indigenous
peoples are open to reduction into data or exposure to the public domain in the
conventional sense.
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A core instrument in the open data movement is the 2015 International Open Data
Charter (ODC), which begins with the statement that “[o]pen data is digital data
that is made available with the technical and legal characteristics necessary for it to
be freely used, reused, and redistributed by anyone, anytime, anywhere” (Open Data
Charter, 2015). While there is much that is laudable in this statement and the others
in the ODC, the instrument does not, in its current form, take cognisance of the requirements of Indigenous data sovereignty. As Rainie et al. (2019) write, the ODC’s
call for data’s free use, reuse, and redistribution “by anyone, anytime, anywhere” is “in
direct tension with the rights of Indigenous peoples to govern their data, including
the right to decide what is shared or withheld, likely resulting from the ODC being
developed without the involvement of Indigenous peoples” (Rainie et al., 2019, p.
301).
It is necessary to ensure that big data and open data approaches are understood and
applied by nation states and other stakeholders in ways that, in the words of Open
North and BCFNDGI (2017, p. 6), do not “further marginalize/reinforce structural
oppression toward Indigenous Nations.” According to Lauriault (2017), as quoted in
Oguamanam and Jain (2017), the “open data community needs to critically reflect on
its worldview and how it differs from that of Indigenous People”. There is evidence
to suggest that this point is not lost on certain big data and open data players. For
example, Open North, a global big data entity, is actively involved with Canadian
Indigenous people in efforts to foster Indigenous data sovereignty in ways that
critically account for its relationship with open data and its underlying parameters
(Open North & BCFNDGI, 2017).
IP and ABS
The question of how Indigenous data sovereignty protocols (e.g., the OCAP
framework that is discussed below) deal with non-Indigenous use of Indigenous
data is crucially important. And among the most egregious abuses of Indigenous
knowledge by non-Indigenous actors are those perpetrated via the application of
intellectual property (IP) rights—for example, via private-sector patenting, without
FPIC, of pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals and agricultural or food products developed
with the use of Indigenous knowledge and/or genetic resources sourced from
Indigenous lands.
Central to IP questions, and to Indigenous data sovereignty, are matters of access
and benefit sharing (ABS) in respect of genetic resources on Indigenous lands, and
the associated Indigenous knowledge (Robinson, 2010; 2014). The evolution of
ABS has resulted in the reinforcement of valuable consent principles such as the
aforementioned FPIC—through which, when IP rights are sought, there must be
documentation of the source and origin of the genetic resources being acquired for
research and, where applicable, a resulting invention or innovation (Robinson et al.,
2017). ABS is a traction point for underscoring how biotechnology and Indigenous
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ecological (or biocultural) knowledge constitute one of the core intersection points in
the data sovereignty domain. In order for Indigenous peoples to be able to effectively
participate in ABS, it is imperative that they have control over the data representations
of their genetic resources and associated Indigenous knowledge.
One way in which Indigenous data can be harnessed in a manner that mitigates the
potential for IP and ABS abuses is compilation of Indigenous knowledge into online
databases that make clear the provenance of the knowledge. A pioneering initiative
of this kind is India’s Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL), established
in 2001 by the Indian Government’s Council of Scientific and Industrial Research
(CSIR). The TKDL project has “structured and classified the Indian Traditional
Medicine System […], thus enhancing the quality of search and examination of
prior art with respect to patent applications […] in the area of traditional knowledge”
(TKDL, n.d.). The Indigenous knowledge documented in the TKDL is made
available to patent offices around the world, so as to both “protect Indian traditional
medicinal knowledge” and “prevent its misappropriation [through unjust patenting]”
(TKDL, n.d.). The presence of the TKDL has already resulted in more than 200
patent applications being rejected, withdrawn, or revised (TKDL, n.d.).
3. A pioneering national response: Canada’s First Nations and the OCAP
principles
In 1994, the Government of Canada, through Health Canada and its then-named
Medical Services Branch, launched three nationwide longitudinal health surveys.
The initiative excluded most members of Canada’s First Nations. (The First Nations,
with the Inuit and Métis, constitute the country’s Indigenous peoples.) In an effort
to address this gap, in 1995 the Medical Services Branch extended an invitation to
regional First Nations representatives to participate in a supplementary survey. This
invitation came at a time when, as explained by the First Nations Information Governance Centre (FNIGC), “the issue of First Nations jurisdiction over all matters
including ownership of information was at the forefront of First Nations political
thinking” (FNIGC, 2016, p. 146). Emblematic of the prominence of the issue at the
time is the 1996 Report of the country’s Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
(RCAP), which pointed to the fact that information-gathering on Indigenous people is typically conducted without considering the peoples’ concerns and priorities
(RCAP, 1996).
In response to the aforementioned government invitation to participate in a supplementary health survey, in 1997 the First Nations constituted a committee (the
precursor to today’s FNIGC) that conducted and delivered the inaugural First Nations Regional Health Survey (RHS) (FNIGC, 2016). The data collected through
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this exercise was, according to the FNIGC, “invaluable, helping to generate program
resources in several key public and community health areas” (FNIGC, 2016, p. 147).
In addition,
First Nations were acutely aware of the opportunity to utilize the RHS
as a vehicle to move the benchmark ahead in favour of First Nations’ data
jurisdiction and ensure the continued forward momentum of sovereignty
over data information, knowledge and stories. It was from the works of
the RHS that the concepts inherent to data jurisdiction were articulated.
(FNIGC, 2016, p. 147)
The RHS is now undertaken every four years in Canada, and Canadian Indigenous peoples’ participation is backed by the FNIGC-developed (and trademarked)
ownership, control, access, and possession (OCAP) governance principles (FNIGC,
n.d.). OCAP “represents principles and values that are intertwined and reflective of
First Nations’ views of jurisdiction and collective rights” (FNIGC, 2016, p. 149), and
is institutionally administered by the FNIGC. According to the FNIGC, the RHS
represents
the first national survey to be fully owned, controlled and stewarded by First
Nations. Nothing like it had ever been successfully completed anywhere in
the world. Concepts such as full ownership of data and intellectual property
by First Nations, First Nations stewardship of data and government access
through a limited licence to use were to become essential elements of the
original RHS and form the backbone of OCAP® principles as they exist
today. (FNIGC, 2016, p. 146)
The First Nations’ experience in Canada with the RHS is an “illustration of how
sovereignty can be realized in relation to data, information and knowledge as part
of a broader goal of self-determination” (Kukutai & Taylor, 2016, p. 9). Since its
first implementation in 1997, the RHS has served as one of the beacons in the
global Indigenous movement towards data sovereignty.
4. International responses and processes
UNPFII and UNDRIP
A key milestone during the first UN International Decade of the World’s Indigenous
People (1995–2004) was the establishment in 2000 of the UN Permanent Forum on
Indigenous Issues (UNPFII),2 a high-level advisory body to the UN Economic and
2 Establishment of a Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, ECOSOC Res 2000/22, UNECOSOCOR, 45th Sess, UN Doc E/RES/2000/22 (2000).
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Social Council (ECOSOC). Through ECOSOC, the UNPFII’s opinions and recommendations are channelled to specific UN programmes, funds, and agencies for
implementation and translation into policy. The UNPFII’s work and mandates focus
on six thematic areas, namely: economic and social development, culture, the environment, education, health, and human rights. In 2001, a year after the UNPFII was
established, the UN Commission on Human Rights appointed a Special Rapporteur
on the rights of Indigenous peoples.3
Six years later, in 2007, the UN adopted its Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples (UNDRIP) (UN, 2007a). In the same year, the UN Human Rights Council
established the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP)
(UN, 2007b), which was tasked, pursuant to UNDRIP, with providing expertise and
advice to the Human Rights Council.4 The UNPFII, the Special Rapporteur, and
EMRIP are, thus, the three main bodies in the UN system with special mandates
that directly focus on Indigenous issues, with UNDRIP serving as the framing instrument.
An enduring objective of the Indigenous data sovereignty movement is advancing
the rights enunciated in UNDRIP, including its unequivocal stance on the right of
Indigenous peoples to self-determination. Specifically, Article 3 of UNDRIP provides that “Indigenous Peoples have the right to self-determination. By virtue of that
right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic,
social and cultural development”. And Article 31 of UNDRIP takes an omnibus and
summative approach to the protection of Indigenous rights, declaring that:
Indigenous Peoples have the right to maintain, control, protect, and develop
their cultural heritage, traditional knowledge, and traditional cultural
expressions, as well as the manifestations of their sciences, technologies,
seeds, medicines, knowledge of properties of flora and fauna, sports and
traditional games, visual and performing arts. They also have the right to
maintain, control, protect and develop their intellectual property over such
cultural heritage, traditional knowledge and traditional cultural expressions.
The UNPFII has devoted a significant portion of its work to the promotion of data
sovereignty as part of its support for the right of self-determination unequivocally
affirmed in UNDRIP. Among other things, the UNPFII pursues Indigenous data
sovereignty as a means of ensuring accurate demography and enumeration in
Indigenous communities and, in turn, better aggregation of Indigenous information
3 The first Special Rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous peoples was Mexico’s Rodolfo Stavenhagen,
appointed in 2001.
4 The UNDRIP resolution was passed in September 2007 and the EMRIP resolution was passed in
December 2007.
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towards the measurement and evaluation of progress or lack thereof regarding
UNDRIP and UN programmes that engage Indigenous peoples. The UNPFII’s
work in the area of data derives from its mandate 2(c), in terms of which it is required
to “prepare and disseminate information on Indigenous issues”.5 At its first session
in 2004, the UNPFII convened an Expert Workshop on Data Collection and Data
Aggregation for Indigenous Peoples (UNPFII, 2004). As explained by Gilbert and
Lennox (2019), this workshop established the following core principles:
[…] all data collection should follow the principles of FPIC [free, prior and
informed consent]; the principle of self-identification should be paramount
in determining subjects/categories of data collection; participation of
indigenous peoples in the collection process is essential; and moreover,
‘data collection must respond to the priorities and aims of the indigenous
communities themselves’. (Gilbert & Lennox, 2019, p. 112)
In 2006, the UNPFII convened another data-focused workshop, which recommended, inter alia, that the UN “identify and adopt appropriate indicators of indigenous
identity, lands, ways of living, and indigenous rights to, and perspectives on, development and well-being” (UNPFII, 2006). In the years since these 2004 and 2006
workshops on data collection and aggregation, the UNPFII has consistently placed
Indigenous data issues at the core of UN development planning and implementation
across numerous programmes, funds, and agencies (see Gilbert & Lennox, 2019). In
turn, a wide range of other key international actors, including the World Bank, the
International Finance Corporation, corporations, donors, and development agencies
have come to recognise Indigenous-sanctioned data as being crucial to legitimate
and informed insights into matters of Indigenous peoples’ self-determination and
development.
UN World Conference on Indigenous Peoples, IPMG
The outcome document of the 2014 high-level plenary meeting of the UN General
Assembly, also known as the World Conference on Indigenous Peoples, provides in
paragraph 10 that:
[w]e commit ourselves to working with indigenous peoples to disaggregate
data, as appropriate, or conduct surveys and to utilizing holistic indicators
of indigenous peoples’ well-being to address the situation and needs of
indigenous peoples and individuals, in particular older persons, women,
youth, children and persons with disabilities. (UN General Assembly, 2014)
5 Establishment of a Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, ECOSOC Res 2000/22, UNECOSOCOR, 45th Sess, UN Doc E/RES/2000/22 (2000).
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Data on Indigenous peoples is integral to the UN’s 2015 resolution, Transforming
Our World: The 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development (UN, 2015) and the 17
accompanying Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), as adopted in 2015, with
the UNPFII succeeding in ensuring that Indigenous-related data is “a key strand”
of the SDGs (Gilbert & Lennox, 2019, p. 10), and that the resolution states “the
need for the participation of Indigenous peoples at the country level and […] for
disaggregated data on Indigenous status on Indigenous peoples’ terms” (Rainie et al.,
2019, p. 306).
The key entity for Indigenous peoples within the SDG process is the Indigenous
Peoples Major Group for Sustainable Development (IPMG), which is a strong
champion for the use of Indigenous data in the SDG implementation, monitoring,
and evaluation processes. The IPMG is one of the eligible participating major
groups in the SDG process (see Gilbert & Lennox, 2019; IPMG, n.d.). The group
was proactive via a position paper it prepared for the proposed SDGs in which it
advocated a monitoring and evaluation framework for gauging the impact of SDGs
on Indigenous peoples and issues, especially the right to self-determination (IPMG,
2015).
UN CBD and Nagoya Protocol
Another UN instrument with great relevance to Indigenous data sovereignty is
the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) (UN, 1992). Generally, the
CBD and its 2010 Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit Sharing brought access
to genetic resources, and to associated Indigenous or traditional knowledge, within a framework of fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from the resources’
utilisation. The Nagoya Protocol has a broad definition of “utilization of genetic
resources”, primarily focused on the context of research and development (R&D) in
biotechnology (UN, 2010, Art. 2(c)). The CBD’s definition of biotechnology refers
to “any technological application that uses biological applications, living organisms
and derivatives thereof, to make or modify products or processes for specific use”
(UN, 1992, Art. 2). Derivatives are defined under the Nagoya Protocol as “naturally
occurring biochemical compounds resulting from the genetic expression or metabolism of biological or genetic resources, even if [they do] not contain functional units
of heredity” (UN, 2010, Art. 2(e)).
Both the CBD and its Nagoya Protocol are, on the face of it, oriented towards physical
dealings with—i.e., use and transfer of—genetic resources. Within this orientation,
matters of the provenance or origin of genetic resources (and associated Indigenous
knowledge, where applicable) and of ensuring FPIC are relatively straightforward
(Oguamanam, 2018, p. 198). However, there are today myriad applications of digital
information and communication technologies (ICTs) in R&D relating to genetic resources, including resources in which associated Indigenous knowledge is also
implicated. This transformation in R&D relating to genetic resources is animated
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through disciplinary convergences across, inter alia, bioinformatics, synthetic biology,
digital sequencing, and artificial intelligence (AI) or machine learning. These ICT
applications provide increasingly wide amplitude for generating, processing, and reducing genetic resources and associated Indigenous knowledge into digital, virtual
datasets that proactively de-link the resources from, inter alia, their provenance in
Indigenous and local communities. Such de-linking has ramifications for determining when information or datasets relating to genetic resources interface with Indigenous knowledge and, as such, should have the status of a derivative in relation to any
resulting innovation. This determination of derivative status can be central to, inter
alia, patenting and other forms of IP protection in relation to genetic resources. At
the same time, digital transformations in the biotechnology sphere can have positive
ramifications for open science.
Altogether, the aforementioned ICT deployments present both opportunities and
challenges for Indigenous data sovereignty. There is, accordingly, a clear imperative
for vigilance on the part of Indigenous peoples in respect of how the CBD and its
Nagoya Protocol on ABS respond to, or could be interpreted in the light of, the new
technological realities in which genetic resources are reduced to malleable and incorporeal datasets.
GIDA and IDSIG
Indigenous data sovereignty as an Indigenous-driven international initiative is
currently led by the Global Indigenous Data Alliance (GIDA) and the International
Indigenous Data Sovereignty Interest Group (IDSIG), both of which cooperate with
the Research Data Alliance (RDA). IDSIG is an initiative of a tripartite network of
national Indigenous organisations: Te Mana Raraunga (the Maori Data Sovereignty
Network) in Aotearoa/New Zealand, the US Indigenous Data Sovereignty Network,
and the Maiam nayri Wingara Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Data Sovereignty
Group in Australia (Kukutai & Taylor, 2016; Oguamanam, 2018). In 2017, IDSIG
issued the International Indigenous Data Sovereignty IG Charter Statement, which
includes the following statements:
Like other nation states, Indigenous nations need data about their citizens
and communities to make informed decisions. However, the information
that Indigenous nations have access to is often unreliable, inaccurate, and
irrelevant. Federal, state, and local governments have primarily collected
these data for their own use. Indigenous nations’ reliance on external data
that do not reflect the community’s needs, priorities, and self-conceptions
is a threat to self-determination. The demand for Indigenous data is increasing as Indigenous nations and communities engage in economic, social and cultural development on an unprecedented level. Given the billions
of dollars in research funding spent each year and the increasing momentum of the international big data and open data movements, Indigenous
nations and communities are uniquely positioned to claim a seat at the ta-
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ble to ensure Indigenous Peoples are directly involved in efforts to promote
data equity in Indigenous communities. (IDSIG, 2017)
A 2018 global workshop on “Indigenous Data Sovereignty Principles for the Governance of Indigenous Data”, convened by the RDA and International Data Week in
Gaborone, Botswana, released what have come to be known as the CARE Principles
for Indigenous Data Governance (GIDA, 2019). The CARE principles—collective
benefit, authority to control, responsibility, and ethics—are now the guiding principles of the global Indigenous data sovereignty movement being taken forward by
GIDA, IDSIG, and the RDA. The principles can be viewed as an effort to, inter alia,
temper tendencies among big data, open data, and open science practitioners towards
giving short shrift to Indigenous data sovereignty. GIDA sums up the sentiment in
the following observation:
The current movement toward open data and open science does not fully
engage with Indigenous Peoples rights and interests. Existing principles
with the open data movement (e.g. FAIR: findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable) primarily focus on characteristics of data that will facilitate
increased data sharing among entities while ignoring power differentials
and historical contexts. The emphasis on greater data sharing alone creates
a tension for Indigenous Peoples who are also asserting greater control over
the application and use of Indigenous data and Indigenous Knowledge for
collective benefit. (GIDA, n.d.)
The FAIR principles cited by GIDA in this quoted passage are extolled by the open
data movement, and are also consistent with big data and open science paradigms.
Indigenous data sovereignty proponents are sceptical about the validity of CARE as
a stand-alone set of principles, and hence they insist that there is a need for open data
stakeholders, and indeed open science and big data stakeholders, to adhere to both
the FAIR and CARE principles as a means of accommodating and accounting for
Indigenous data sovereignty.
The CARE framework is oriented towards the collective benefit of Indigenous
peoples achieved through the use of data for inclusive innovation and self-determined
development. It also supports the authority of Indigenous peoples and institutions
to control data relating to their territories, resources, land, knowledge, and language,
and to ensure culturally sensitive data governance models, including adherence to
FPIC. CARE emphasises both data for governance and governance of data, i.e.,
both the use of data for advancing Indigenous governance and, at the same time, the
use of data in ways that follow data governance protocols appropriate to Indigenous
data. CARE also strongly supports ethical considerations across the life cycle of
Indigenous data, including reducing real and perceived harms, optimising benefits,
and promoting human rights, including the rights espoused in UNDRIP.
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Indigenous Navigator
Established in 2014, the Indigenous Navigator is “a framework and set of tools for
and by indigenous peoples to systematically monitor the level of recognition and implementation of their rights” (Indigenous Navigator, n.d.). The tools can be used to
monitor progress towards the Indigenous empowerment and development objectives
set out in, inter alia, the SDGs, UNDRIP, and the World Conference on Indigenous
Peoples (see Gilbert & Lennox, 2019). The Indigenous Navigator facilitates the collection of high-quality grassroots and community data that are then fed into the
project’s online portal.
The Indigenous Navigator’s pilot phase was in 2014, and this involved the use of
the Navigator to generate quality data relating to progress on Indigenous issues in
six countries: Peru, Kenya, Cameroon, Suriname, Thailand, and Nepal. The second
phase, launched in 2017, involved 11 countries, including all the countries in the
first phase, with the exception of Thailand, and adding Bangladesh, Cambodia, the
Philippines, Bolivia, Colombia, and Tanzania.
5. African responses and processes
From the foregoing analysis, it is clear that Indigenous data sovereignty has to date been
driven to a great extent by activities in CANZUS countries. In Africa, engagement
with the global movement has yet to reach critical mass. Among the potential reasons
for this slower evolution of the movement in Africa, compared to the CANZUS
states, is the very different and ambiguous history of the instrumentalisation of the
concept of indigeneity on the continent.
In African countries, indigeneity can be said to have two meanings (see Crawhall,
2011). According to one meaning, all black Africans are Indigenous to Africa. But
according to the second meaning, the large and politically powerful ethnic groupings
in many sub-Saharan African countries are relatively recent arrivals in the territories
they inhabit, having migrated from West Africa and, upon arrival, encountered the
Indigenous peoples already living there (Crawhall, 2011). While there has been, and
still is, a reluctance by some African governments to champion the rights of Indigenous minorities in their nation states, there was evidence of growing acceptance
of Indigenous self-determination among the African diplomats who participated in
the development of UNDRIP, a declaration which the vast majority of African UN
Member States adopted (Crawhall, 2011; UN, 2007). As Crawhall (2011) explains,
central to African states’ growing acceptance of Indigenous peoples’ rights during the
UNDRIP talks was the advocacy work of the Indigenous Peoples of Africa Coordinating Committee (IPACC), a civil society body composed of representatives of
Indigenous peoples in numerous African nations. This augurs well for the future of
efforts towards Indigenous data sovereignty on the continent.
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Indigenous Peoples, Data Sovereignty, and Self-Determination
Also contributing to the potential for a strong African data sovereignty movement is
the robust engagement on the continent with matters of data governance, especially
in the context of IP and development narratives, and in specific areas such as
agricultural data (see Dagne, 2020). As in many other regions of the world, there
is a growing exploration on the continent of elements of “open development” (see
Smith & Seward, 2020) by development funders, development projects, researchers,
scholars, and policymakers. The open development framework valourises open
collaborative innovation (see Open AIR, n.d.), open data, open science, open access
publishing, open government data, open health data, and open educational resources
(OER) (Smith & Seward, 2020). These and similar ideas are finding traction in, and
in relation to, African Indigenous and local communities who are largely represented
in informal economic sectors.
At the same time, particularly in the context of AI deployments on the continent,
there is growing concern about power imbalances between African and foreign
participants, leading to complaints of “data colonialism” (see Couldry & Mejias,
2019). Thus, the opportunities and challenges presented by big data and open data,
and their ramifications for the self-determined development of Indigenous peoples,
are as real, in Africa, as elsewhere.
In the specific context of Indigenous data sovereignty, it is significant that, as
noted earlier, the CARE principles were drafted in Botswana, with active African
representation and participation in the drafting. In addition, it is notable that three
African countries, namely Kenya, Cameroon, and Tanzania, were participants in
the early stages of the operationalisation of the global Indigenous Navigator data
platform.
6. Conclusions
For self-determined Indigenous development to be of any consequence, it must
be rooted in data sovereignty. Put differently, the sine qua non for self-determined
development is the unfettered ability of Indigenous peoples to set their own research
agenda, frame or design their own research questions, and select their own research
partners. Also necessary is the capability of Indigenous peoples to analyse and interpret
research results, and to negotiate their applications or outputs as consequential and
transformative exercises of self-determined development.
Without question, Indigenous data sovereignty as a theory and practice is a work in
progress, with paradigmatic pulls and tensions surrounding it. One core source of
paradigmatic pull and tension is the paradoxical role of ICTs. As with virtually all
socio-economic realms, ICTs have redefined and emboldened Indigenous interest
in data sovereignty. ICTs enhance the ease of sourcing and transferring information,
potentially resulting in the intensification of asymmetrical power relations,
reminiscent of how colonial states and their agents dealt with Indigenous data. At
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the same time, ICTs have emboldened Indigenous peoples by serving as authentic
tools of decolonisation and self-determination—tools that are essential to furthering
the advancement of Indigenous data sovereignty. Without introspection or protocols
on how ICTs can better serve Indigenous peoples in their quest for data sovereignty,
there is the potential for an uncritical embrace that leads to the slippery reductionist
slope of technological determinism. Such a tendency would undermine the necessary
emphasis on cultural and other contextual variables that are served and preserved by
Indigenous data sovereignty vis-á-vis the rapid traction and interest now associated
with open data, big data, open science, and related concepts.
A sign of the growing maturity of the Indigenous data sovereignty movement is
its increasing emphasis on the need for high-quality data in order for Indigenous
peoples to be able to evaluate progress and ensure accountability across development
and human rights spectra. This quest for quality is evidenced in, inter alia, the
Indigenous Navigator project discussed above. Another sign of the maturing of the
Indigenous data sovereignty space is the increasing, albeit late, presence of African
players. However, African Indigenous peoples have yet to fully integrate themselves
into the global movement, and there is an urgent need for this integration to occur.
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