Ărramăt
Ărramăt is an Indigenous-led team of Indigenous organizations, governments, university researchers, and other resource people working together for research and action to support the health and well-being of the environment and people. Ărramăt is guided by the wisdom of Indigenous Knowledge Systems, focusing on the interconnectedness of biodiversity and community health. It aims to strengthen Indigenous voices and capacities to document the importance of the whole environment, including biodiversity, to the health and well-being of communities. Dr. Charles is co-lead, with Dr. Sherry Pictou, of a transformation pathway within Ărramăt looking at issues of recognition of Indigenous rights, Indigenous perspectives on concepts of “sustainable use”, and the importance to health, wellbeing and biodiversity conservation of “getting on the land and water”.
Community Conservation Research Network (CCRN)
The CCRN is a network of researchers and diverse community, Indigenous and governmental organizations at over 30 study sites around the world, hosted at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax, Canada. Through the CCRN, these researchers and partners leverage expertise, collaborations and local knowledge on the linkages between communities, conservation and livelihoods, to compile, synthesize and create new knowledge of national and international significance. New insights from the CCRN’s research into regional and community environmental governance, capacity-building for aboriginal self-governance, local networking and the success of conservation initiatives are yielding important lessons for communities, policy makers and decision makers at all levels. Please explore the extensive website CommunityConservation.net for details.
Environmental Stewardship by Small-Scale Fisheries (FAO)
In small-scale fisheries around the world, fishing communities and organizations are actively involved in a wide range of environmental conservation and stewardship activities. This key role of small-scale fisheries can be essential to the health and livelihoods of fishing communities, and the environment and economy broadly, but it is not always widely known and appreciated. To improve this situation, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and Saint Mary’s University (Canada), in cooperation with global fisher organizations, have completed a project to compile the experiences of small-scale fisher organizations and local small-scale fishing communities around the world, in environmental conservation and stewardship. This has led to a new guidebook for fishing communities, organizations and policymakers, and a better understanding of how small-scale fisheries protect and care for the environment, and what leads to success in environmental stewardship supporting sustainable livelihoods. The report highlights the role of small-scale fisheries in biodiversity and environmental conservation, supports the building of stewardship capacity and provides guidance on how government legislation and policy can better support environmental stewardship in small-scale fisheries. All of this supports implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries (SSF Guidelines), and contributes to the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response Network (MEOPAR)
MEOPAR is a Network of Centres of Excellence across Canada (www.meopar.ca) that brings together researchers to build Canada’s capability to assess and respond to marine hazards – such as oil spills, coastal flooding and the longer-term threats of climate change – and to manage the risks involved. Dr. Charles is Principal Investigator of a component of MEOPAR on Human Dimensions of Coastal Community Response to Marine Hazards and Climate Change. He is also part of a team (ICAP) studying ocean acidification and its impacts on coastal communities and economies. With communities along Canada’s coasts regularly facing crisis situations due to marine hazards, it is important to support them through a set of ‘best practices’ that build community resilience to marine hazards, making use of all forms of knowledge, including local knowledge. Our integrated research approach combines social-ecological systems thinking with concepts of social learning and empowerment. We seek to support community adaptive capacity and long-term development of key strengths in Canada’s coastal communities necessary to make them resilient to marine hazards, long-term and short-term. An evidence-based assessment of best practices for community level preparedness and resilience, along all three coasts of Canada, is being developed through a global meta-analysis of case studies. This will be used to provide policy input to governments, and to develop mechanisms for rapid appraisal to identify community values and priorities, and to assist in long-term planning for and short-term response to emergencies.
Coastal CURA (Community-University Research Alliance)
The Coastal CURA was a community-based participatory initiative that built knowledge and capacity, across the Canadian Maritimes, to support community involvement in managing coasts and oceans. The Coastal CURA – a “Community University Research Alliance” – operated as a partnership of First Nations (Indigenous) communities, fishery-related organizations and university participants, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). The project reached out as well to other communities, organizations and academics, as well as to government agencies, interested in contributing to the goals of the project. With coastal communities and coastal resource users facing challenges from a range of environmental, economic and social impacts, the Coastal CURA helped to meet these challenges through support for community involvement in both grass-roots and large-scale integrated coastal and ocean management initiatives – typically ones that seek to manage multiple coastal uses (fishing, aquaculture, shipping, tourism, etc.) and that can have a major impact on the social and economic well-being of coastal communities. The Coastal CURA website (see link above) houses the proceedings of the international conference “People in Places”, which provides knowledge and insight on these coastal community challenges.
Other Research
The work of Dr. Charles within two large initiatives – Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response Network (MEOPAR) and OceanCanada Partnership (OCP) –contributed to building resilient and sustainable oceans on Canadian coasts and to supporting coastal communities as they respond to rapid and uncertain changes. His research synthesizes social, cultural, economic and environmental knowledge about oceans and coasts nationally – and involves community-level and synthesis research focused on the future of Canada’s coastal communities. Two key aspects of the work involved (a) direct engagement with the community of Port Mouton Bay, Nova Scotia, and (b) a survey of coastal communities in Nova Scotia to assess involvement in local visioning, scenario planning and sustainable economic development. A further aspect of the work led to two short films focusing on coastal communities:
Coastal Communities Face the Future
A Short Film Celebrating Canada’s Coastal Communities – “How Canada’s coastal communities face the future, create solutions and take action, inspiring a way forward for all of us.”
Coastal Communities at the Ready: Facing Hazards from the Sea
This film explores how coastal communities are preparing for, and responding to, a range of climate change impacts and other hazards hitting the coast.