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NEWS The IASSA Council has released a statement on the COVID-19 situation in the Arctic and it's impact on Arctic communities and Arctic research. You can read it in full below.
April 15, 2020
TO: IASSA members
Arctic researchers
Arctic residents
Funding agencies
Academic institutions
Government and non-government organizations
Dear Arctic community,
The International Arctic Social Sciences Association Council (IASSA) expresses its support to researchers, students and Arctic community members as we all deal with the COVID-19 pandemic. Residents of Arctic communities, where there are limited public health, financial and community resources, are particularly vulnerable in this crisis. This includes the Indigenous, traditional and local knowledge holders so many of us work with and count as our close friends and colleagues. At the time of the writing, more than 3,505 Arctic residents have been diagnosed with COVID-19 and 33 have died (https://arctic.uni.edu/arctic-covid-19).
Impacts on social science research
Arctic social and health scientists are affected by the COVID-19 pandemic as we often travel to and stay in communities, engage in face-to-face communication and need access to local archives and data to conduct our research. Community-driven work is not possible without regular communications between community members and researchers, meetings and collaborative activities. Although some of the communication can and has moved online, the connectivity issues in the Arctic create formidable obstacles for advancing our collaborative work. Many, if not most projects in the social sciences, health and humanities, are experiencing postponements or delays and still face great uncertainties. The COVID-19 pandemic also has revealed considerable knowledge gaps in health and social domains around the issues of epidemiology, public health, social support networks, food security, housing availability, social infrastructure development and many others, all of which require immediate research efforts to be commenced and funded.
IASSA recommended COVID-19 pandemic response principles
Under these unprecedented circumstances, the IASSA Council recommends the following principles to be used by the research community in response to the COVID-19 pandemic:
Sincerely,
IASSA Council:
Dr. Andrey N. Petrov, University of Northern Iowa, USA (IASSA President)
Dr. Dmitry Funk, Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, RAS, Russia
Dr. Diane Hirshberg, University of Alaska Anchorage, USA
Dr. Michał Łuszczuk, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Poland
Dr. Gertrude Saxinger, University of Vienna, Austria
Dr. Peter Sköld, Umeå University, Sweden (Past President)
Dr. Tatiana Vlasova, Institute of Geography, RAS, Russia
Dr. Gary Wilson, University of Northern British Columbia, Canada
Ms. Alona Yefimenko, Indigenous Peoples Secretariat, Norway