Inuit Institute for Research and Planning, 2008-present

The Institute is a unique multi-year program designed by CIET to support autonomous Inuit research and planning. Inaugurated in 2008, the Institute is developing a cohort of Inuit researchers capable of designing and leading research projects on Inuit priorities, combining traditional Inuit knowledge and modern science, and using data from research for health planning across Inuit Nunaat.
The Institute is also setting the stage for an Inuit-oriented masters and doctoral program in health research. This is the first such initiative in Canada, at a time of heightened interest in the social, economic and educational situation of Inuit Nunaat.
Institute participants discuss contemporary Inuit issues while learning the basics of modern epidemiology and how to link them with traditional Inuit knowledge. The combination of hands-on research and theoretical training gives special attention to research methods for working with small dispersed populations in Northern Canada and to the communication of research evidence for planning.
The Inuit Institute for Research and Planning was started by CIET, in partnership with the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatmi and the Nassivik Centre for Inuit Health and Changing Environment, with partial funding from the government of Canada.
![]() Inuit participants and CIET staff during the Inuit winter institute
in Ottawa |
Participants laid out an Inuit view of health and reviewed historical and contemporary Inuit health issues. They chose to work on key research concerns, such as youth suicide, parenting, housing, and environmental contamination. For many of the participants this was their first approach to research methods which in this case emphasized tools for working with small, dispersed populations in
The 21 participants who graduated from the course came from across the four Northern Inuit regions and from the Ottawa Inuit community. Many of them are working with Inuit organizations at federal, regional and community levels; others are involved in community health care and local government. Their breadth of experience and enthusiasm shaped discussions and course content, making it relevant to Inuit needs and circumstances.
CIETcanada hosted this first IWI, together with Anisnabe Kekendazone -- the Ottawa Aboriginal Capacity and Development Research Environment (ACADRE) -- and the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami. Funding for the initiative came from CIETcanada, Nasivvik Centre for Inuit Health and Changing Environments at