SHI to sponsor lecture on Alaska Native identitiy study by visiting scholars

Sealaska Heritage Institute will sponsor a lecture by two visiting scholars on the preliminary results from their study on Alaska Native identity involving participants recruited largely from Juneau and Haines.

The scholars, Dr. Caitlin Stern and Dr. Jessie Barker, have been conducting research in Southeast Alaska since May through SHI’s Visiting Scholars Program. As part of the program, SHI asks that scholars share their research with the community as a public service.

The first part of the study is a survey, with a follow-up online group activity and in-person interview. In the survey, participants report the communities and groups of other people with which they have familial and cultural ties, and rate the strength of their connections to these groups. Participants also answer questions about how they perceive other people with whom they share or do not share certain aspects of their identity, and about how they might behave towards those people in different situations. The data from this study will provide insight into the different components that make up Alaska Native identity, and how those components shape people’s expectations about and interactions with others.

Dr. Stern is originally from Haines and is now a researcher at the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico. Dr. Barker is a researcher at Aarhus University in Denmark. Both scholars are biologists interested in social behavior — for example, how people interact with others in groups, and how people perceive themselves in relation to others in different social contexts.

The lecture is scheduled 12 p.m. on Wednesday, June 22, in the Living History Center at the Walter Soboleff Building. The lecture is free and open to the public. The study was sponsored by the National Science Foundation.

More in Neighbors

Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Feb. 9 – 15
Juneau Community Calendar

Weekly events guide: Feb. 9 – 15

Jeff Lund/contributed
The author would rather fish for steelhead, but he’ll watch the Super Bowl.
I Went to the Woods: Super Bowl spectacle

At some point on Sunday, dopey characters, hopelessly addicted to Doritos, will… Continue reading

Peggy McKee Barnhill (Courtesy photo)
Gimme a Smile: How much snow can one backyard hold?

Snow, snow, everywhere, and no place to put it!

The Spruce Root team gathers for a retreat in Sitka. Spruce Root, is an Indigenous institution that provides all Southeast Alaskans with access to business development resources. (Photo by Lione Clare)
Woven Peoples and Places: Wealth lives in our communities

Sustainable Southeast Partnership reflects on a values-aligned approach to financial wellness.

Actors in These Birds, a play inspired by death, flowers and Farkle, hold ‘flowers’ during a performance at the UAS Egan Library on Saturday, Jan. 31. (photo courtesy Claire Richardson)
Living and Growing: Why stories of living and dying in Juneau matter

What if we gave our town a safe space to talk about living and dying with family and friends?

calendar
Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Feb. 2 – Feb. 8

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

calendar
Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Jan. 26 – Feb. 1

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

Courtesy photo
Adam Bauer of the Local Spiritual Assembly of Bahá’ís of Juneau.
Living and Growing: Surfing into the future

Many religious traditions draw strength from the past.

calendar (web only)
Weekly events guide: Juneau community calendar for Jan. 19-25

Visit Juneau Arts and Humanities Council at JAHC.org for more details on this week’s happenings.

Most Read