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AccelNet Implementation Phase 1: Tools for Addressing Cultural, Ethical, Legal, and Social — NSF Award to University of Arizona (A

Today, the vast majority of Indigenous Peoples’ data are held by non-Indigenous entities that continue to produce knowledge across fields of medicine, public health, genomics, earth sciences, and the social sciences. However, Indigenous data are often organized into Western classification and naming systems that not on

Award titleAccelNet Implementation Phase 1: Tools for Addressing Cultural, Ethical, Legal, and Social
Award ID2412372
AwardeeUniversity of Arizona
CityTUCSON
StateAZ
Amount obligated$1,500,000
Principal investigatorStephanie Carroll
ProgramAccelNet - Accelerating Resear
Start date07/01/2024
AbstractToday, the vast majority of Indigenous Peoples’ data are held by non-Indigenous entities that continue to produce knowledge across fields of medicine, public health, genomics, earth sciences, and the social sciences. However, Indigenous data are often organized into Western classification and naming systems that not only disconnect such data from the Indigenous contexts that give them meaning but also make it difficult for Indigenous Peoples to find their data. Indigenous data are any data, info
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