Indigenous Data Alliance
🪶 Advancing IDSov & IDGov alongside @indigenousdatacollab @usidsn @datawarriorslab
⚡ Policy, research, education & action
🌿 #DataAreOurRelatives

You cannot have AI governance without Indigenous Data Governance.
A powerful statement from Stephanie Carroll during the U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit 2026.
The future of AI governance must include Indigenous leadership, data rights, and systems grounded in accountability.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #AI #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

We are filled with gratitude as we reflect on the close of this year’s U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit. ✨
To our sponsors, presenters, panelists, Tribal leaders, Elders, participants, fellows, and the many relatives who traveled from near and far, thank you. 🙏 Your presence, knowledge, leadership, and willingness to gather made this summit what it was.
We are especially grateful to the team, staff, and supporters whose work behind the scenes helped make this the largest gathering in the United States centered on Indigenous data sovereignty and governance once again this year. 👏 It was a tremendous collective effort.
This summit was a place of celebration, honest dialogue, courageous questions, and meaningful reflection. Elders offered powerful prayers on behalf of each of us. 🪶 Leaders shared real challenges. Communities brought forward visions for their futures.
This is what the summit was meant to be: a space where truths are spoken, ideas exchanged, and pathways forward shaped together. ❤️
Many are returning home carrying new ideas, new relationships, and important work ahead. 🌿 One of our most important responsibilities is carrying knowledge back to our peoples so informed decisions can be made with timely insight and vision.
The coming together of our experiences, perspectives, questions, and visions created new data for us to carry home. New data to steward with care.
As Data Warriors within this movement ✊, it remains our collective responsibility to analyze, interpret, and make accessible the knowledge created through this gathering in ways meaningful and useful to our communities.
It is our commitment at the Indigenous Data Alliance to continue supporting this journey, sharing resources, creating spaces for learning, and working alongside you as we strengthen data futures rooted in our own values, governance systems, and self-determination. 🤲📚
This year’s theme, Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance, By Us, For Us, was deeply felt throughout the summit.
🙏 Thank you for trusting us, gathering with us, and helping shape this movement together.
#IDSovSummit26 #IndigenousDataSovereignty #DataAreOurRelatives

Indigenous data are all around us.
In land. In ceremony. Shaping our thoughts. Living in our communities.
Not all data has to be digital. But all Indigenous data belong in Indigenous hands.
Swipe to learn more.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataAlliance

Indigenous data are all around us.
In land. In ceremony. Shaping our thoughts. Living in our communities.
Not all data has to be digital. But all Indigenous data belong in Indigenous hands.
Swipe to learn more.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataAlliance

Indigenous data are all around us.
In land. In ceremony. Shaping our thoughts. Living in our communities.
Not all data has to be digital. But all Indigenous data belong in Indigenous hands.
Swipe to learn more.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataAlliance

Indigenous data are all around us.
In land. In ceremony. Shaping our thoughts. Living in our communities.
Not all data has to be digital. But all Indigenous data belong in Indigenous hands.
Swipe to learn more.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataAlliance

Indigenous data are all around us.
In land. In ceremony. Shaping our thoughts. Living in our communities.
Not all data has to be digital. But all Indigenous data belong in Indigenous hands.
Swipe to learn more.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataAlliance

🪶 Data governance is not only about data access. It is also about responsibility, ethics, relationships, and the systems we build around data stewardship.
Indigenous Peoples’ relationships to lands, waters, species, and ecosystems must not be erased as environmental data infrastructures continue to grow. They must be strengthened. ✊
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #OpenScience #EarthScience #EnvironmentalData #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousTechnology

🪶 Data governance is not only about data access. It is also about responsibility, ethics, relationships, and the systems we build around data stewardship.
Indigenous Peoples’ relationships to lands, waters, species, and ecosystems must not be erased as environmental data infrastructures continue to grow. They must be strengthened. ✊
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #OpenScience #EarthScience #EnvironmentalData #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousTechnology

🪶 Data governance is not only about data access. It is also about responsibility, ethics, relationships, and the systems we build around data stewardship.
Indigenous Peoples’ relationships to lands, waters, species, and ecosystems must not be erased as environmental data infrastructures continue to grow. They must be strengthened. ✊
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #OpenScience #EarthScience #EnvironmentalData #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousTechnology

🪶 Data governance is not only about data access. It is also about responsibility, ethics, relationships, and the systems we build around data stewardship.
Indigenous Peoples’ relationships to lands, waters, species, and ecosystems must not be erased as environmental data infrastructures continue to grow. They must be strengthened. ✊
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications.
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #OpenScience #EarthScience #EnvironmentalData #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousTechnology

A review of 111 studies found that Indigenous-managed lands consistently matched or outperformed government-protected areas in biodiversity, forest protection, carbon storage, and conservation outcomes. 🌿
Where Indigenous governance and rights protections were weak, conservation outcomes declined. ❌
Indigenous environmental stewardship systems are deeply connected to governance and knowledge systems, stewardship responsibilities, and long-term relationships with lands and ecosystems.
Environmental monitoring, biodiversity science, conservation metrics, carbon storage studies, and conservation research are not separate from governance. 🌱 They are connected to whose knowledge systems are recognized, whose stewardship systems are supported, and whose relationships with lands and ecosystems are protected and used over time.
As Dr. William Nikolakis (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Stewardship) states, “If we are serious about conservation in Canada, we need to support Indigenous governance."
Adapted from: Nikolakis, W. et al. (2026). Research reviewing Indigenous-managed lands and conservation outcomes. People and Nature / UBC research.
https://news.ubc.ca/2026/05/indigenous-lands-outperform-protected-areas-on-conservation/
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #EnvironmentalData #Conservation #Biodiversity #EarthScience #OpenScience #IndigenousKnowledge #IndigenousStewardship #IndigenousScience #IndigenousResearch #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives

A review of 111 studies found that Indigenous-managed lands consistently matched or outperformed government-protected areas in biodiversity, forest protection, carbon storage, and conservation outcomes. 🌿
Where Indigenous governance and rights protections were weak, conservation outcomes declined. ❌
Indigenous environmental stewardship systems are deeply connected to governance and knowledge systems, stewardship responsibilities, and long-term relationships with lands and ecosystems.
Environmental monitoring, biodiversity science, conservation metrics, carbon storage studies, and conservation research are not separate from governance. 🌱 They are connected to whose knowledge systems are recognized, whose stewardship systems are supported, and whose relationships with lands and ecosystems are protected and used over time.
As Dr. William Nikolakis (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Stewardship) states, “If we are serious about conservation in Canada, we need to support Indigenous governance."
Adapted from: Nikolakis, W. et al. (2026). Research reviewing Indigenous-managed lands and conservation outcomes. People and Nature / UBC research.
https://news.ubc.ca/2026/05/indigenous-lands-outperform-protected-areas-on-conservation/
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #EnvironmentalData #Conservation #Biodiversity #EarthScience #OpenScience #IndigenousKnowledge #IndigenousStewardship #IndigenousScience #IndigenousResearch #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives

A review of 111 studies found that Indigenous-managed lands consistently matched or outperformed government-protected areas in biodiversity, forest protection, carbon storage, and conservation outcomes. 🌿
Where Indigenous governance and rights protections were weak, conservation outcomes declined. ❌
Indigenous environmental stewardship systems are deeply connected to governance and knowledge systems, stewardship responsibilities, and long-term relationships with lands and ecosystems.
Environmental monitoring, biodiversity science, conservation metrics, carbon storage studies, and conservation research are not separate from governance. 🌱 They are connected to whose knowledge systems are recognized, whose stewardship systems are supported, and whose relationships with lands and ecosystems are protected and used over time.
As Dr. William Nikolakis (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Stewardship) states, “If we are serious about conservation in Canada, we need to support Indigenous governance."
Adapted from: Nikolakis, W. et al. (2026). Research reviewing Indigenous-managed lands and conservation outcomes. People and Nature / UBC research.
https://news.ubc.ca/2026/05/indigenous-lands-outperform-protected-areas-on-conservation/
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #EnvironmentalData #Conservation #Biodiversity #EarthScience #OpenScience #IndigenousKnowledge #IndigenousStewardship #IndigenousScience #IndigenousResearch #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives

A review of 111 studies found that Indigenous-managed lands consistently matched or outperformed government-protected areas in biodiversity, forest protection, carbon storage, and conservation outcomes. 🌿
Where Indigenous governance and rights protections were weak, conservation outcomes declined. ❌
Indigenous environmental stewardship systems are deeply connected to governance and knowledge systems, stewardship responsibilities, and long-term relationships with lands and ecosystems.
Environmental monitoring, biodiversity science, conservation metrics, carbon storage studies, and conservation research are not separate from governance. 🌱 They are connected to whose knowledge systems are recognized, whose stewardship systems are supported, and whose relationships with lands and ecosystems are protected and used over time.
As Dr. William Nikolakis (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Stewardship) states, “If we are serious about conservation in Canada, we need to support Indigenous governance."
Adapted from: Nikolakis, W. et al. (2026). Research reviewing Indigenous-managed lands and conservation outcomes. People and Nature / UBC research.
https://news.ubc.ca/2026/05/indigenous-lands-outperform-protected-areas-on-conservation/
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #EnvironmentalData #Conservation #Biodiversity #EarthScience #OpenScience #IndigenousKnowledge #IndigenousStewardship #IndigenousScience #IndigenousResearch #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives

A review of 111 studies found that Indigenous-managed lands consistently matched or outperformed government-protected areas in biodiversity, forest protection, carbon storage, and conservation outcomes. 🌿
Where Indigenous governance and rights protections were weak, conservation outcomes declined. ❌
Indigenous environmental stewardship systems are deeply connected to governance and knowledge systems, stewardship responsibilities, and long-term relationships with lands and ecosystems.
Environmental monitoring, biodiversity science, conservation metrics, carbon storage studies, and conservation research are not separate from governance. 🌱 They are connected to whose knowledge systems are recognized, whose stewardship systems are supported, and whose relationships with lands and ecosystems are protected and used over time.
As Dr. William Nikolakis (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Stewardship) states, “If we are serious about conservation in Canada, we need to support Indigenous governance."
Adapted from: Nikolakis, W. et al. (2026). Research reviewing Indigenous-managed lands and conservation outcomes. People and Nature / UBC research.
https://news.ubc.ca/2026/05/indigenous-lands-outperform-protected-areas-on-conservation/
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #EnvironmentalData #Conservation #Biodiversity #EarthScience #OpenScience #IndigenousKnowledge #IndigenousStewardship #IndigenousScience #IndigenousResearch #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives

🌎 What does it mean to move from CARE in theory to CARE in action?
As Earth science and open science initiatives continue to expand, Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Indigenous Data Governance must remain at the forefront of how data systems, infrastructure, and research practices are designed and implemented. ✨
Implementing CARE is not a one-time activity. It requires ongoing commitment, relational accountability, and systems that respect Indigenous Peoples, communities, lands, and futures. 🌿
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications. @llcooljennings
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #CAREPrinciples #OpenScience #EarthScience #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousResearch

🌎 What does it mean to move from CARE in theory to CARE in action?
As Earth science and open science initiatives continue to expand, Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Indigenous Data Governance must remain at the forefront of how data systems, infrastructure, and research practices are designed and implemented. ✨
Implementing CARE is not a one-time activity. It requires ongoing commitment, relational accountability, and systems that respect Indigenous Peoples, communities, lands, and futures. 🌿
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications. @llcooljennings
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #CAREPrinciples #OpenScience #EarthScience #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousResearch

🌎 What does it mean to move from CARE in theory to CARE in action?
As Earth science and open science initiatives continue to expand, Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Indigenous Data Governance must remain at the forefront of how data systems, infrastructure, and research practices are designed and implemented. ✨
Implementing CARE is not a one-time activity. It requires ongoing commitment, relational accountability, and systems that respect Indigenous Peoples, communities, lands, and futures. 🌿
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications. @llcooljennings
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #CAREPrinciples #OpenScience #EarthScience #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousResearch

🌎 What does it mean to move from CARE in theory to CARE in action?
As Earth science and open science initiatives continue to expand, Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Indigenous Data Governance must remain at the forefront of how data systems, infrastructure, and research practices are designed and implemented. ✨
Implementing CARE is not a one-time activity. It requires ongoing commitment, relational accountability, and systems that respect Indigenous Peoples, communities, lands, and futures. 🌿
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications. @llcooljennings
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #CAREPrinciples #OpenScience #EarthScience #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousResearch

🌎 What does it mean to move from CARE in theory to CARE in action?
As Earth science and open science initiatives continue to expand, Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Indigenous Data Governance must remain at the forefront of how data systems, infrastructure, and research practices are designed and implemented. ✨
Implementing CARE is not a one-time activity. It requires ongoing commitment, relational accountability, and systems that respect Indigenous Peoples, communities, lands, and futures. 🌿
Adapted from:
Jennings, L. et al. (2025). Governance of Indigenous Data in Open Earth Systems Science. Nature Communications. @llcooljennings
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #CAREPrinciples #OpenScience #EarthScience #IndigenousDataAlliance #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousResearch

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth

A powerful week of connection and collaboration✨
The 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit (IDSov Summit) recently wrapped up in Tucson at Casino Del Sol on the lands of the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the traditional homelands of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
The event brought together Tribal leaders, community members, program reps, scholars, policy experts and other data actors and practitioners for four powerful days of dialogue, collaboration, and action to advance necessary conversations around Indigenous data sovereignty and governance.
Centered around the theme “Coming Home: Indigenous Data Governance By Us, For Us,” the summit created space to uplift Indigenous-led approaches to data, governance and future-building.
Participants engaged in conversations on how data can strengthen governance systems and reflect community values. The gathering highlighted the importance of Indigenous Peoples’ rights to access, utilize, and control their own data – on their own terms.
With a mix of open sessions and dedicated time for Indigenous participants, the summit fostered both learning and community-centered dialogue, moving the work of Indigenous data sovereignty forward in impactful ways.
The host organization, the Indigenous Data Alliance, thanks everyone, including the Udall Center, who helped make this summit such a meaningful space for learning, partnership, and progress. 🌵 🤝
🔗 If you want to read more about this awesome summit, make sure to check out the IDSov Summit Wrap story at the link in our bio!
.
.
.
@uazpublichealth
In this clip from the @relational_science podcast, Raphael Wahwassuck, Tribal Council member of the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, reflects on the evolving approaches, strategies, and responsibilities surrounding Indigenous data while attending the Tribal Leaders Forum at the U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty Summit, 2026.
Listen to the full conversation on the Relational Science podcast on Spotify > 🔗 in BIO
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RelationalSciencePodcast #IndigenousLeadership #IndigenousFutures #TribalLeaders #IndigenousDataAlliance #idsovsummit26

✨ What resonated most from the Summit experience?
During the Rez Cafe session, participants reflected on the relationships, responsibilities, teachings, and values that continue to shape Indigenous Data Sovereignty and governance work across communities.
From water as relative and teacher, to intergenerational knowledge transfer, relational accountability, community care, and actionable pathways forward, these reflections highlighted the living and relational nature of this work.
Thank you to everyone who contributed their thoughts, stories, and visions for our Indigenous future. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RezCafe #IndigenousFutures #idsovsummit26

✨ What resonated most from the Summit experience?
During the Rez Cafe session, participants reflected on the relationships, responsibilities, teachings, and values that continue to shape Indigenous Data Sovereignty and governance work across communities.
From water as relative and teacher, to intergenerational knowledge transfer, relational accountability, community care, and actionable pathways forward, these reflections highlighted the living and relational nature of this work.
Thank you to everyone who contributed their thoughts, stories, and visions for our Indigenous future. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RezCafe #IndigenousFutures #idsovsummit26

✨ What resonated most from the Summit experience?
During the Rez Cafe session, participants reflected on the relationships, responsibilities, teachings, and values that continue to shape Indigenous Data Sovereignty and governance work across communities.
From water as relative and teacher, to intergenerational knowledge transfer, relational accountability, community care, and actionable pathways forward, these reflections highlighted the living and relational nature of this work.
Thank you to everyone who contributed their thoughts, stories, and visions for our Indigenous future. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RezCafe #IndigenousFutures #idsovsummit26

✨ What resonated most from the Summit experience?
During the Rez Cafe session, participants reflected on the relationships, responsibilities, teachings, and values that continue to shape Indigenous Data Sovereignty and governance work across communities.
From water as relative and teacher, to intergenerational knowledge transfer, relational accountability, community care, and actionable pathways forward, these reflections highlighted the living and relational nature of this work.
Thank you to everyone who contributed their thoughts, stories, and visions for our Indigenous future. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RezCafe #IndigenousFutures #idsovsummit26

✨ What resonated most from the Summit experience?
During the Rez Cafe session, participants reflected on the relationships, responsibilities, teachings, and values that continue to shape Indigenous Data Sovereignty and governance work across communities.
From water as relative and teacher, to intergenerational knowledge transfer, relational accountability, community care, and actionable pathways forward, these reflections highlighted the living and relational nature of this work.
Thank you to everyone who contributed their thoughts, stories, and visions for our Indigenous future. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RezCafe #IndigenousFutures #idsovsummit26

✨ What resonated most from the Summit experience?
During the Rez Cafe session, participants reflected on the relationships, responsibilities, teachings, and values that continue to shape Indigenous Data Sovereignty and governance work across communities.
From water as relative and teacher, to intergenerational knowledge transfer, relational accountability, community care, and actionable pathways forward, these reflections highlighted the living and relational nature of this work.
Thank you to everyone who contributed their thoughts, stories, and visions for our Indigenous future. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RezCafe #IndigenousFutures #idsovsummit26

✨ What resonated most from the Summit experience?
During the Rez Cafe session, participants reflected on the relationships, responsibilities, teachings, and values that continue to shape Indigenous Data Sovereignty and governance work across communities.
From water as relative and teacher, to intergenerational knowledge transfer, relational accountability, community care, and actionable pathways forward, these reflections highlighted the living and relational nature of this work.
Thank you to everyone who contributed their thoughts, stories, and visions for our Indigenous future. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RezCafe #IndigenousFutures #idsovsummit26

💬 Indigenous knowledge systems are not relics of the past. They are sophisticated, relational, empirical systems built through generations of observation, responsibility, and connection to Land.
For Indigenous Peoples, science, governance, and knowledge have always existed in relationship and have carried on through lived practice.
As conversations around data, technology, and innovation continue to grow, it is important to recognize and honor the long-standing Indigenous systems of knowledge that continue to guide our communities today.
Quote by @drdrdez, Co-Founder of the Indigenous Data Alliance. ✨
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousKnowledge #IndigenousScience #DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataAlliance #IndigenousInnovation #IndigenousFutures

✨ We are excited to share a new zine created in partnership with @te_kahui_raraunga and Te Pā Tūwatawata called, "Relational Infrastructures for Sovereign Data Storage." 🔗 in BIO
Originally released during the Tribal Leaders Forum at the 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit, this zine explores how Indigenous communities are carrying data sovereignty forward through infrastructures grounded in Indigenous governance systems, relationships, responsibilities, and ways of knowing.
Centered around a Māori-led case study, the zine highlights how data storage technologies and infrastructures can be shaped through Indigenous values and processes rather than settler colonial frameworks. It reflects ongoing conversations about what it means to build systems that uphold sovereignty, protect relationships, and support future generations.
Thank you to everyone helping move this work forward across communities, nations, and relational networks. We are honored to now make this resource publicly available. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RelationalInfrastructures #SovereignDataStorage #IndigenousDataAlliance #TeKahuiRaraunga

✨ We are excited to share a new zine created in partnership with @te_kahui_raraunga and Te Pā Tūwatawata called, "Relational Infrastructures for Sovereign Data Storage." 🔗 in BIO
Originally released during the Tribal Leaders Forum at the 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit, this zine explores how Indigenous communities are carrying data sovereignty forward through infrastructures grounded in Indigenous governance systems, relationships, responsibilities, and ways of knowing.
Centered around a Māori-led case study, the zine highlights how data storage technologies and infrastructures can be shaped through Indigenous values and processes rather than settler colonial frameworks. It reflects ongoing conversations about what it means to build systems that uphold sovereignty, protect relationships, and support future generations.
Thank you to everyone helping move this work forward across communities, nations, and relational networks. We are honored to now make this resource publicly available. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RelationalInfrastructures #SovereignDataStorage #IndigenousDataAlliance #TeKahuiRaraunga

✨ We are excited to share a new zine created in partnership with @te_kahui_raraunga and Te Pā Tūwatawata called, "Relational Infrastructures for Sovereign Data Storage." 🔗 in BIO
Originally released during the Tribal Leaders Forum at the 2026 U.S. Indigenous Data Sovereignty & Governance Summit, this zine explores how Indigenous communities are carrying data sovereignty forward through infrastructures grounded in Indigenous governance systems, relationships, responsibilities, and ways of knowing.
Centered around a Māori-led case study, the zine highlights how data storage technologies and infrastructures can be shaped through Indigenous values and processes rather than settler colonial frameworks. It reflects ongoing conversations about what it means to build systems that uphold sovereignty, protect relationships, and support future generations.
Thank you to everyone helping move this work forward across communities, nations, and relational networks. We are honored to now make this resource publicly available. 🤝
#IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #DataAreOurRelatives #RelationalInfrastructures #SovereignDataStorage #IndigenousDataAlliance #TeKahuiRaraunga

Indigenous Data Sovereignty means having the authority to decide. ✊
This was a key message shared throughout conversations at the Tribal Leaders Forum during the 2026 Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Governance Summit.
Sovereignty means having the authority to decide who to partner with, how data are used, what systems are designed, and which data are accessed and shared.
The goal is not isolation. It is self-determination. ✨
When governance is defined by communities, partnerships can exist in ways that are respectful, accountable, and aligned with Indigenous values. 🤝
IDSov is our authority and our autonomy. Our sovereignty, and our right. ✊
#DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #IndigenousDataAlliance #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousData

Indigenous Data Sovereignty means having the authority to decide. ✊
This was a key message shared throughout conversations at the Tribal Leaders Forum during the 2026 Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Governance Summit.
Sovereignty means having the authority to decide who to partner with, how data are used, what systems are designed, and which data are accessed and shared.
The goal is not isolation. It is self-determination. ✨
When governance is defined by communities, partnerships can exist in ways that are respectful, accountable, and aligned with Indigenous values. 🤝
IDSov is our authority and our autonomy. Our sovereignty, and our right. ✊
#DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #IndigenousDataAlliance #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousData

Indigenous Data Sovereignty means having the authority to decide. ✊
This was a key message shared throughout conversations at the Tribal Leaders Forum during the 2026 Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Governance Summit.
Sovereignty means having the authority to decide who to partner with, how data are used, what systems are designed, and which data are accessed and shared.
The goal is not isolation. It is self-determination. ✨
When governance is defined by communities, partnerships can exist in ways that are respectful, accountable, and aligned with Indigenous values. 🤝
IDSov is our authority and our autonomy. Our sovereignty, and our right. ✊
#DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #IndigenousDataAlliance #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousData

Indigenous Data Sovereignty means having the authority to decide. ✊
This was a key message shared throughout conversations at the Tribal Leaders Forum during the 2026 Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Governance Summit.
Sovereignty means having the authority to decide who to partner with, how data are used, what systems are designed, and which data are accessed and shared.
The goal is not isolation. It is self-determination. ✨
When governance is defined by communities, partnerships can exist in ways that are respectful, accountable, and aligned with Indigenous values. 🤝
IDSov is our authority and our autonomy. Our sovereignty, and our right. ✊
#DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #IndigenousDataAlliance #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousData

Indigenous Data Sovereignty means having the authority to decide. ✊
This was a key message shared throughout conversations at the Tribal Leaders Forum during the 2026 Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Governance Summit.
Sovereignty means having the authority to decide who to partner with, how data are used, what systems are designed, and which data are accessed and shared.
The goal is not isolation. It is self-determination. ✨
When governance is defined by communities, partnerships can exist in ways that are respectful, accountable, and aligned with Indigenous values. 🤝
IDSov is our authority and our autonomy. Our sovereignty, and our right. ✊
#DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #IndigenousDataAlliance #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousData

Indigenous Data Sovereignty means having the authority to decide. ✊
This was a key message shared throughout conversations at the Tribal Leaders Forum during the 2026 Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Governance Summit.
Sovereignty means having the authority to decide who to partner with, how data are used, what systems are designed, and which data are accessed and shared.
The goal is not isolation. It is self-determination. ✨
When governance is defined by communities, partnerships can exist in ways that are respectful, accountable, and aligned with Indigenous values. 🤝
IDSov is our authority and our autonomy. Our sovereignty, and our right. ✊
#DataAreOurRelatives #IndigenousDataSovereignty #IndigenousDataGovernance #IndigenousDataAlliance #IndigenousEducation #IndigenousData
The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.
Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.
View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.
This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.
Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.
Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.
Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.
Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.
Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.
The service is free to use.
Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.
Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.
Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.