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Welcome to the Science Summit at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA77)

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Tuesday, September 27 • 9:00am - 11:30am
(REF 27209) Decolonizing Science and Moving to Inclusive Science

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RECORDING: Decolonizing Science and Moving to Inclusive Science

RECORDINGS: Japan-related playlist

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This event will take place in New York and participation is possible in person and online. 

In person participation requires a separate registration, which is available above.

Keynote: Thilina Heenatigala (9:00 am EDT / 1:00 pm UTC)
Discussion: Thilina Heenatigala, Tana Joseph (10:00 am EDT / 2:00 pm UTC)

Colonial scientific practices are embedded in current scientific research, policy, education, and outreach. It is therefore necessary to acknowledge and undo colonial structures and processes and change practices and mindsets within science and scientific communities. A keynote presentation and subsequent panel will address colonial scientific practices, the negative scientific developments that are caused by them, and how to move towards an inclusive science system, globally.

Colonial scientific practices can be found at multiple levels in science systems. For example, large scientific structures are built in indigenous lands without ethical policy discussions, there are large discrepancies between local and international salaries for the same research positions, and end-users of data that are produced by structures in the Global South are found mostly in the Global North. In general, academia is still largely based on 17th century European social structures.

The effects of colonial efforts that exist around the world were somewhat highlighted during the COVID-19 pandemic. When scientists from the Global North and western world struggled with travelling for field work, the system had to rely on local expertise for collaborations. This was visible far beyond the sciences and goes into other fields as well, showing that colonial practices are still at work today. There is an urgent need to redesign the system in order to advance the sciences in an inclusive way.

These are local and global issues that are urgent and need to be addresses today. By acknowledging, addressing the issues, making awareness, and finally undoing the colonial structure from science system is the way towards an inclusive science environment. Progressing from colonial science to inclusive science is at global interest for better industry and innovation practices, reducing inequalities in science academia and education, improving the core curriculum by including incorporating native and local knowledge for higher-quality education.

Moderator
avatar for Thilina Heenatigala

Thilina Heenatigala

Assistant Professor/Director of Communications & Lecturer, Earth-Life Science Institute
Thilina Heenatigala (he/him) is the Director of Communications and Assistant Professor at Earth-Life Science Institute (ELSI) in Tokyo. He leads the outreach team, science communication projects, and teaches the science communication graduate course at ELSI. His research interests... Read More →

Speakers
TJ

Tana Joseph

Equity and Inclusion Officer for Dutch astronomy



Tuesday September 27, 2022 9:00am - 11:30am EDT
Hybrid
  Science Diplomacy, Development