n Episode 23 of the Co-management Commons Podcast, Dr. Natalie Ban shares her academic background, positionality, and early research influences in the Amazon that made her reflect on research approaches. Natalie emphasizes the importance of building trust over time with Indigenous communities. She highlights a seaweed harvesting project that deepened her cultural understanding. Natalie also reflects on changing approaches to Indigenous research. Natalie also provides an example of a community-engaged project that influenced policy change. Natalie is optimistic as she sees First Nations increasingly visioning their own futures, and she hopes to mentor more indigenous students and researchers. Chapters 0:00:00 - Introductions 0:01:24 - Positionality 0:03:08 - Post-secondary beginnings and research experiences 0:09:13 - Success in building relationships 0:14:19 - Discussion about methods and terminology 0:19:34 - Opportunities to engage and learn from Indigenous practices 0:23:33 - Thoughts on institutional boundaries and hurdles 0:29:12 - Discussing human well-being 0:35:30 - A research-to-policy case study on Dungeness crab 0:45:11 - Co-governance vs co-management 0:49:54 - Thoughts on First Nations research progress co-management 0:53:44 - Fisheries Congress insights 0:57:29 - Final advice for researchers considering work with Indigenous Peoples Links https://thenarwhal.ca/bc-first-nation...