March 13, 2018
Researcher builds respectful partnerships with Indigenous people
Dr. Susan Kutz is more herself when she鈥檚 among the Inuit and Dene of Canada鈥檚 far North.
鈥淚 find that I laugh a lot more when I鈥檓 up there, and I just get back to the basics and what鈥檚 important in life,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e closer to nature and not so much caught up with materialistic things.鈥
A professor at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kutz was recognized as a Peak Scholar by the 草莓污视频导航 in 2017. The annual honour is given to academics who have made an impact outside the university in everything from innovation to community engagement.
Kutz has worked since 1994 with Indigenous people to not only promote research into wildlife health in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, but also to help communities whose own health depends on traditional sources of food and income such as muskox and caribou.
Susan Kutz
Animals experiencing problems
At a time of , some muskox herds have declined more than 65 per cent, with the animals experiencing problems ranging from impaired immune systems to the spread of parasites and deadly bacteria, she says. 鈥淪ome caribou herds have gone down from 500,000 animals to about 10,000,鈥 says Kutz.
She has spent nearly 25 years building respectful partnerships with Indigenous communities, who have a generations-old . 鈥淭hey have a far closer connection to the animals and the land, and they hunt and butcher their own meat,鈥 she says.
With associate professor Dr. Sylvia Checkley of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kutz is a co-supervisor of , a PhD student from Italy who recently released a that lists the Indigenous Arctic community of Iqaluktutiaq (Cambridge Bay) as a co-author. 鈥淚 never imagined before coming to Calgary that I would be able to do such amazing things, and part of it is definitely because Susan is very capable as a researcher and very capable also on a community level,鈥 says Tomaselli.
Such research is shared with Indigenous people so they can make their own decisions, says Kutz. 鈥淭here is a long history of researchers going north, taking what they want and coming back south, and communities not only weren鈥檛 acknowledged, they did not even know what the researchers found.鈥
Susan Kutz
Preliminary talks with Stoney Nakoda
For 11 years, Kutz has also led teams of veterinary students to work with Dene in the of the Northwest Territories, providing everything from treatment of dogs to school outreach programs that allow Indigenous children to learn about veterinary medicine as a potential career.
鈥淚 think she鈥檚 the most patient and non-judgmental person I鈥檝e ever met,鈥 says Marcella St. Louis, a fourth-year veterinary medicine student who recently returned from a three-week trip to the Sahtu. 鈥淪he did a great job prepping us about the Dene culture before we even went up there.鈥
The Faculty of Veterinary Medicine is currently in preliminary talks with the Stoney Nakoda First Nation west of Calgary. 鈥淲e hope to build a partnership where our students can have meaningful interactions with them to learn about First Nations culture, history and relationships with animals, and at the same time, we can provide animal health services,鈥 says Kutz.
Susan Kutz
The 草莓污视频导航 unveiled its Indigenous Strategy, , on Nov. 16, 2017. The strategy is the result of nearly two years of community dialogue and campus engagement, and involved the work of a number of people from the university, Indigenous communities and community stakeholders. Recommendations from the strategy are being implemented as we move forward with promise, hope and caring for the future.
As part of campus-wide efforts, the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Indigenous Strategy is an initiative to be active participants in the reconciliation process between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Canadians. It builds on current programs and linkages with Indigenous communities in wildlife health, production animal health, equine and companion animal health, and ecosystem and public health. It incorporates recognition of, and respect for, Indigenous perspectives, culture and ways of knowing.
Susan Kutz