About Local Contexts

Origins

Local Contexts was founded by Jane Anderson and Kim Christen in 2010. The Local Contexts project grew from the needs of Indigenous and local organizations who wanted a practical method to deal with the range of intellectual property issues that arise in relation to managing cultural heritage materials. Emerging from the Mukurtu CMS platform’s use of traditional knowledge fields to include traditional knowledge and copyright concerns, Local Contexts started as a way to provide strategies for managing, sharing, and protecting digital heritage.

In 2022, Local Contexts was incorporated as a non-profit organization under the laws and jurisdiction of the Navajo Nation and is recognized as a 501(c)3 non-profit entity with the US Internal Revenue Service.

Land Acknowledgement

As an organization that transcends geographic and national boundaries, Local Contexts acknowledges that all of the lands and waters where we live and work are Indigenous Homelands. We recognize the ongoing significance of these lands and waters for Indigenous Peoples in the past, present, and future. 

Local Contexts is committed to Indigenous sovereignty and ethical data governance; we believe that naming and addressing the violence of settler-colonialism and its ongoing effects is central to the work that we do. The legacy of settler-colonialism has manifested in the structural exclusion and erasure of Indigenous people within institutions that steward collections of Indigenous heritage and data. The (mis)information or absence of information within these institutions and their systems continues to pose enduring challenges that adversely affect Indigenous communities. 

We have responsibilities and obligations to support Indigenous peoples, communities, and organizations. In our efforts to overcome the legacies of settler-colonialism, Local Contexts was developed to create effective and recognized pathways for implementing and maintaining Indigenous data rights and facilitate ethical relationships and enable collaboration with stewards of Indigenous collections.

We ask you to acknowledge these truths and join us in our commitment to acting as respectful guests within the homelands in which we live and work. 

To learn more about Indigenous homelands visit www.native-land.ca.

Each issue of the Local Contexts Newsletter includes updates on some of the real-life applications of the Labels and Notices, news, upcoming events, and much more. New issues of the Newsletter will be released seasonally, aligning with the ebbs and flows of our natural world and relations around the world.

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News and Resources

First global standard on Indigenous Peoples’ data

Jan 8, 2026 The newly adopted “IEEE Recommended Practice for Provenance of Indigenous Peoples' Data,” is the first-ever international standard that calls for “appropriate disclosure of Indigenous peoples’…

Donate to the Label Development Fund

Dec 2, 2025 Local Contexts is connected with Indigenous communities, institutions, researchers, and integration partners around the world. For the past 15 years, our relationships have helped us…

Omeka certified as first Integration Partner

Sep 17, 2025 Omeka has become a certified Integration Partner on the Local Contexts Hub. “We are ecstatic to have Omeka become a certified Integration Partner, the first…

UMass Amherst Libraries join Local Contexts as Subscriber

Aug 28, 2025 With subscription, UMass leading the way for transformational practice that connects Indigenous cultural authority to collections and research.