Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) M. Reynolds , K. Sanga , Jasmine Donahaye
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Victoria University
ANO 2020
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine
ISSN 1741-427X
E-ISSN 1741-4288
DOI 10.1177/1177180120917481
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 AD2C5D7AFD9E17DFAEE17EB4DC0FE653
MD5 cce4e846a074298469f754a82b8328bd

Resumo

Across the world, knowledge communities categorise and attach conditions of guardianship to different kinds of knowledge. For private or secret knowledge, those responsible for its care have obligations for arranging and restricting transmission to ensure community survival. While an insider/outsider positionality is often used to navigate this knowledge area, a binary approach is unhelpful. Taking a more relational reading of positionality, we support a dynamic understanding of the transmission of restricted knowledge, using relevant principles of guardianship or custodianship. Based on a Melanesian Solomon Islands tribe, the study sketches a set of principles and shows how they operate in practice. Our intents are to honour the contribution that Melanesian thought makes to rethinking research dichotomies regarding secret knowledge, that readers appreciate the dynamic nature of knowledge guardianship, and that this case study enhances the discussion on ethical entitlement to, or restriction of, Indigenous knowledge in the Pacific region and beyond.

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