Author: Tibisay Sankatsing Nava – Leiden University, Netherlands

Co-authors:
Arlene Alvarez – Museo Arqueológico Regional Altos de Chavón
Corinne Hofman – Leiden University

NEXUS1492 (Leiden University) is co-creating a collaborative exhibition on indigenous heritage in the Caribbean. The pan-Caribbean exhibition Caribbean Ties, which fosters partnerships, bridges research and collections and is driven by people in the region, is one of the major public endeavors of the ERC-Synergy NEXUS1492 project and more than 10 regional partners in the Caribbean and in Europe.

The exhibition and accompanying public engagement programme is titled “Caribbean Ties: A shared Amerindian past, a common present and an inclusive future”, and emphasizes continuity and change across the Caribbean and uses indigenous heritage to help build an inclusive Caribbean society. This project will launch in at least 10 sites across the Caribbean simultaneously: each partner is participating in the co-development of a common story that will be presented in each location. At the same time, partners co-create a locally relevant component with their local target audience.

NEXUS 1492 is an ERC Synergy research project that contributes to rewriting Caribbean pre-colonial history from the perspective of the Amerindian. Through archaeology, archaeometry, geochemistry, heritage and network science research, NEXUS 1492 explores how the indigenous past can be positively incorporated in cultural heritage across the diverse region of the Caribbean.

In this talk we explore the development of this public engagement with science project from two key perspectives: lessons learned in co-creating research-based exhibitions with diverse partners, comparing best practices in public engagement across the Caribbean and the co-development of a relevant and sustainable international public engagement programme in a diverse landscape of islands, cultures and languages.

The author has not yet submitted a copy of the full paper.

Presentation type: Individual paper
Theme: Stories
Area of interest: Comparing science communication across cultures

Author: Tibisay Sankatsing Nava – Leiden University, Netherlands

Co-authors:
Arlene Alvarez – Museo Arqueológico Regional Altos de Chavón
Eduard Dresscher – Fundacion 1403 Aruba
Corinne Hofman – Leiden University

A consortium of institutional partners in the Caribbean has come together to co-create a pan-Caribbean exhibition on Amerindian Heritage called Caribbean Ties: A shared indigenous past, a common present and an inclusive future.

The Caribbean Ties project was initiated by the ERC-Synergy NEXUS 1492 together with several Caribbean and European institutions. NEXUS 1492 is an interdisciplinary research project (across sciences) that contributes to rewriting a crucial chapter in global history by focusing on transformations of indigenous, Amerindian cultures and societies across the historical divide of 1492, through archaeology, network science, geochemistry, and heritage research, with a specific focus on sharing the scientific research methods and results with the public.

The exhibition will be launched simultaneously in at least 10 countries in May 2019. The design of the exhibition allows each local partner to select the appropriate modules for their exhibition space constraints, local context and budget. The exhibition is co-designed with all consortium partners from across the Caribbean and Europe. Each exhibition is led locally and includes locally relevant content provided by each leading partner, with the aim to positively incorporate Amerindian heritage in Caribbean and European culture. An extension of the exhibition online will provide additional information that ties all local exhibitions together.

In this talk we will focus specifically on the development of inclusive narratives and practices for public engagement of science in a diverse landscape of communities, cultures, histories and languages in the Caribbean.

The author has not yet submitted a copy of the full paper.

Presentation type: Visual talk
Theme: Stories
Area of interest: Comparing science communication across cultures