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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DTSTART:20250301T020000
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DESCRIPTION:This presentation by professors Chie Sakakibara and Andre Orteg
 a shares an ongoing collaborative project. The project connects Alaska Nat
 ive and Filipino communities in coastal Alaska through their shared relati
 onships with Pacific salmon.&nbsp\; We highlight salmon not just as a reso
 urce\, but as a living presence that supports food\, culture and everyday 
 community life.&nbsp\; As climate change reshapes salmon habitats and fish
 ing conditions\, we explore how caring for salmon can inspire new ways of 
 thinking about environmental knowledge\, responsibility and justice.&nbsp\
 ; Grounded in community geography and Indigenous research approaches\, and
  drawing on 2024 fieldwork\, we reflect on alliance-building\, participato
 ry mapping and shared concerns\, offering early insights and inviting conv
 ersation and feedback.This talk is part of the Colloquium Speakers Series\
 , presented by the Geography and the Environment Department.
DTEND:20260206T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T024842Z
DTSTART:20260206T200000Z
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SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Salmon Peoples: Cross-Cultural Connections and Community Geography 
 in Arctic Alaska
UID:RFCALITEM639140501229258487
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>This presentation by professors Chie Sakaki
 bara and Andre Ortega shares an ongoing collaborative project. The project
  connects Alaska Native and Filipino communities in coastal Alaska through
  their shared relationships with Pacific salmon.&nbsp\; </p><p>We highligh
 t salmon not just as a resource\, but as a living presence that supports f
 ood\, culture and everyday community life.&nbsp\; As climate change reshap
 es salmon habitats and fishing conditions\, we explore how caring for salm
 on can inspire new ways of thinking about environmental knowledge\, respon
 sibility and justice.&nbsp\; </p><p>Grounded in community geography and In
 digenous research approaches\, and drawing on 2024 fieldwork\, we reflect 
 on alliance-building\, participatory mapping and shared concerns\, offerin
 g early insights and inviting conversation and feedback.</p><p>This talk i
 s part of the Colloquium Speakers Series\, presented by the Geography and 
 the Environment Department.</p>
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