*Result*: Situating Place‐Based, Community‐Engaged Watershed Research at Xwulqw'selu Sta'lo'.

Title:
Situating Place‐Based, Community‐Engaged Watershed Research at Xwulqw'selu Sta'lo'.
Source:
Community Science; Dec2025, Vol. 4 Issue 4, p1-20, 20p
Geographic Terms:
Database:
Complementary Index

*Further Information*

*Xwulqw'selu Sta'lo' is a culturally significant and salmon‐bearing river facing significant challenges, which Cowichan Tribes and the British Columbia provincial government are addressing with a first‐of‐its‐kind watershed plan. Our research is deeply situated at Xwulqw'selu Sta'lo' and is grounded in interdisciplinary academic spheres of place‐based research, water monitoring and modeling, cogovernance and systems theory. Our project is an example of developing a deliberate, robust, and responsive community science project designed to engage community, impact decision‐making, and respectfully work together in place, on the land. We describe developing and initiating our project and share a visual representation of how we structure our project as "woven statements." The five statements give our research project team a shared understanding and motivation and help us plan and make decisions. The statements can be visualized as vertical warps interwoven with research projects, goals, and partnerships as horizontal wefts. The warps and wefts mutually support each other since weaving gains strength where warp and weft meet, connect, and overlap. Key lessons include the importance of taking responsibility for positionality, knowledge, and relationships; the value of intention setting that reflects the context and the priorities of partners and community; and that projects can flourish if structured around the good present in community. Plain Language Summary: Xwulqw'selu Sta'lo' (the Koksilah River) is a salmon‐bearing river of cultural significance to Cowichan Tribes. Today, it faces serious challenges including low summer flows, flooding, and pressures from forestry and agriculture. In response, Cowichan Tribes and the provincial government are working together on the first watershed sustainability plan in British Columbia. Our research team is supporting this effort through a community science project that combines hydrologic monitoring, modeling, and community engagement. Guided by "woven statements" that represent our shared intentions, we aim to strengthen relationships, generate knowledge, and inform decision‐making. We reflect on what it means to be deeply grounded in place, accountable to partners, and respectful of Indigenous rights and laws. This case study shows how community science can be intentional, collaborative, and responsive, offering insights for others seeking to link water research with cogovernance and reconciliation. Key Points: Our community science project is connected to a watershed cogovernance process with Indigenous and settler governmentsOur project design foregrounds positionality, relationships, and accountability in community‐academic collaborationsWe wove shared understandings, motivations, and values into statements grounding our place‐based research [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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