GUIDELINES FOR RESPECTING CULTURAL KNOWLEDGE Indigenous knowledge system: The unified knowledge that originates from and is characteristic of a particular society and its culture. Informed consent: Consent that is granted only after one understands all that the consent permits or prohibits and the implications and possible effects of granting that consent. Appropriate translation services need to be provided for persons to be truly “informed” when more than one language is involved. Legal protection: Protected by the laws of a government or society. Does not always have to be in written form (some Native laws are passed on through oral tradition and customary practice.) Manuscript: A written document that may be presented to a publisher or others. Native: A member of an indigenous society, as distinguished from a stranger, immigrant, or others who are not considered full members of the indigenous society. Native language specialist: A speaker of a language who is recognized by other speakers of the language as being fluent in the language and has the ability to translate and interpret the language correctly. Password protected: A method of protecting access to information; requiring a person to know a password to gain access to particular information. Placed-based education: An educational program that is firmly grounded in a community’s unique physical, cultural and ecological system, including the language, knowledge, skills and stories that have been handed down through the generations. Public domain: Something that is owned by the public and is free from any legal restriction, such as a copyright or patent. 27

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