Episode 1: Isa Ansari with Kim TallBear and Jessica Kolopenuk on Indigenous led Techno-Scientific Innovation

The Pandemicene Podcast aims to produce knowledge that can help all of us – scholars and scientists, students and activists – imagine and enact just futures both in our home state of California and in our communities worldwide.

Headshots of Kim and Jessica against an orange background

Airing on KZSC Santa Cruz 88.1 FM, on two Sundays, October 11th and 18th, 6:30 – 7 pm PST.

Link to the live stream, or listen below.

Welcome to the Pandemicene podcast! Today we welcome you to a conversation with Kim TallBear and Jessica Kolopenuk, two Indigenous scholars at the University of Alberta, Canada. We talk about their Indigenous STS research training program, their upcoming open access class on Indigenous peoples and pandemics, what a “productive embrace of crisis” looks like, and how understanding our relations as kin on earth might help us learn how to live better together on stolen land.

Interviewer Bios:

Isa Ansari is a recent graduate from the sociology department at UCSC. She was born and raised in the East Bay, where she currently lives and organizes. Isa loves skateboarding, reading, and writing poems.

Guest Bios:

Kim TallBear and Jessica Kolopenuk are both scholars in the Faculty of Native Studies at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. They are the co-founders and principal investigators of Indigenous Science, Technology, and Society (STS), a research training program based out of the University of Alberta that seeks to “promote Indigenous self-determination” by supporting Indigenous led techno-scientific innovation and ways of inquiring and producing knowledge that supports Native people and their communities (https://indigenoussts.com/).

Works Cited in Interview:

TallBear, Kim. “Caretaking Relations, Not American Dreaming.” Kalfou, vol. 6, no. 1, 2019. doi: https://doi.org/10.15367/kf.v6i1.228

Innes, Robert Alexander. Elder Brother and the Law of the People: Contemporary Kinship and Cowessess First Nation. University of Manitoba Press, 2013.

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