Libraries are a vital part of Indigenous communities, but thereās very little academic research that focuses on those libraries. Sandy Littletree is working to change that.
āA lot of people, when you say ālibraries,ā get warm, fuzzy feelings about books and story time, and thatās great,ā said Littletree, who was recently hired as an assistant professor at the University of Washington Information School. āBut there are really complex issues of information access for Native communities.ā
In her new role, Littletree is excited to have more time to dig deep into her research, which focuses on Indigenous systems of knowledge and how they intersect with library and information science. Before being hired for the tenure-track position, Littletree was a teaching professor at the iSchool, where she also earned her Ph.D.
Tribal libraries are a relatively recent development, and they have not been well researched. Littletree wants to help remedy that.
āThere is so much complexity to these issues that donāt often get the opportunity to be investigated or highlighted,ā she said.
Littletree, an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation (DinĆ©) from her fatherās side and Eastern Shoshone from her motherās side, says itās important to have researchers working to understand that complexity. Native communities face a variety of issues, including a history of colonization and boarding schools that attempted to take away their knowledge and culture. Each community and sovereign tribal nation will deal with its information needs in a different way, and researchers like Littletree need to understand that complexity.
āStudents would just come in with hearts in their eyes and fires in their souls after being in her classes.ā
For her , Littletree studied the history of tribal libraries, looking to understand how those institutions came to be. She didnāt grow up with a tribal library in her community, and she wanted to understand more about their development and their important role. Those libraries have helped preserve and share Indigenous knowledge, as well as offering a place for gathering and cultural and language renewal. Sheās continued doing research in that area since.
Among Littletreeās current research is a Mellon Foundation-supported project called āCentering Washington Tribal Libraries: Building Relationships and Understanding Libraries from the Stories of their Communities.ā Along with Cindy Aden, iSchool professor of practice, Littletree is working to build relationships and understanding of what is happening at tribal libraries around the state.
Littletree is also working on a second Mellon Foundation-supported project, āData Services for Indigenous Scholarship and Sovereignty.ā Indigenous data has a history of bad management from non-Natives. This project is working to help overcome that by creating a framework that will ensure Indigenous communities and scholars can decide how their data is controlled.
In addition to her research work, Littletree will be teaching Indigenous Systems of Knowledge and Indigenous Ways of Knowing in the Digital World.
Miranda Belarde-Lewis, an assistant professor of North American Indigenous Knowledge at the iSchool, said Littletreeās teaching skills are among her greatest strengths.
āShe comes in with a lot of humility,ā Belarde-Lewis said. āShe doesnāt assume that folks know a lot. And she doesnāt do that in a patronizing way. And she has a very empathetic teaching philosophy.ā
Belarde-Lewis has taught students who had also taken Littletreeās class, and saw how effective and inspiring her teaching was.
āStudents would just come in with hearts in their eyes and fires in their souls after being in her classes,ā Belarde-Lewis said. āHer ability to inspire our MLIS students was something I got to see.ā
The two have co-authored articles, which Belarde-Lewis said was a great experience, in part because Littletree is such an effective communicator.
āAs a collaborator, as a professor, as a researcher and as a fellow faculty, she is such an asset to the iSchool,ā Belarde-Lewis said. āShe would be an asset to any school and weāre so lucky.ā
Littletree wonāt be teaching again until March. Until then, sheāll be working on her research and other projects and connecting with students.
āBeing tenure-track gives me an opportunity to dive into some of these topics and hopefully bring students along with me,ā she said. āIāll have the capacity to recruit Ph.D. students or more MLIS students to work on these projects with me. I would like to see a lot more of that representation in our students. ⦠Indigenous librarianship is a growing area and there arenāt many of us in academia at this level focusing on it. Iām really excited to have this platform and this opportunity to focus on some of these big issues that really need addressing.ā