{"id":5238,"date":"2020-05-05T12:36:19","date_gmt":"2020-05-05T16:36:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cointelegraph.com\/magazine\/?p=5238"},"modified":"2021-01-27T09:31:45","modified_gmt":"2021-01-27T14:31:45","slug":"blockchain-preserve-heritage-marshall-islands","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cointelegraph.com\/magazine\/2020\/05\/05\/blockchain-preserve-heritage-marshall-islands","title":{"rendered":"Extinct or Extant: Can Blockchain Preserve the Heritage of Endangered Populations?"},"content":{"rendered":"
A<\/span>round halfway between Hawaii and northern Australia, the Marshall Islands are a long way from anywhere. It would be hard to find a place more remote. And in the glory of the sun, the Marshall Islands seem to be a tropical paradise.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n But the sprawling array of coral atolls in the Pacific Ocean is characterized by stark and tragic contrasts. With its coconut palms, white sands, turquoise waters, coral reefs, and friendly people it should be a major tourist hub. Yet many of the 1,156 islands are uninhabitable, and the isolation that makes The Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) so attractive to adventurous tourists also made it the perfect place for extensive U.S. nuclear bomb testing between 1946 and 1958.<\/span><\/p>\n Poisoned and displaced in the past, the citizens of the Marshall Islands face an even more uncertain future. At an average elevation of just two meters above sea level, rising tides caused by melting ice caps are on course to swallow up the atolls in the next two or three decades, submerging the islands and leaving its 59,000 people homeless.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Marshallese poet and climate change activist Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner chillingly stated:<\/span><\/p>\n “I wanna tattoo this number to my forehead: Marshall Islands as a nation actually contributes 0.00001% of the world\u2019s global emissions. And yet we are the ones set to disappear first.”<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Life, for the Marshallese, is brutally unfair.<\/span><\/p>\n Aware of the fate that awaits them, the Marshallese government and former President Hilda Hiene have been active in promoting climate change action. Marshall Islands and other Micronesian students have also spoken at UN gatherings to highlight the peril that countries at low elevation face.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n “The dangers are literally on their doorsteps,” says Sean Stelten, a tropical weather forecaster living in the RMI. “We\u2019re already seeing the effects of it in certain areas. There\u2019s one island near me where we keep seeing palm trees dying and falling at the end of the island due to erosion caused by higher seas.”<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cIt sort of puts a shot clock on our existence,\u201d former chief secretary and advisor to the Marshallese president Ben Graham told National Geographic. \u201cIt\u2019s not a 30-second shot clock, but a 30-year shot clock.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n And it’s not just a Marshallese problem. In fact, some 200 million people around the world face the prospect of losing their lands to rising tides by 2100. The majority of these are in impoverished countries with booming populations such as Bangladesh, India, Nigeria, Vietnam, and the Philippines.<\/span><\/p>\n If we lose the fight to climate change, more of the world’s terrain will be claimed by the oceans. Other countries will face severe droughts, famines, and intense hurricanes.<\/span><\/p>\n While the Marshallese will survive, their country may not. What will become of their culture, heritage, language? What will remain of their identity when their connection to their home is gone? Will they even be Marshallese any more?\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Clearly, there’s a very big difference between the words “save” and “preserve.” Blockchain technology cannot save the Marshall Islands.<\/span><\/p>\n But it might help to preserve the Marshallese identity.<\/span><\/p>\n According to the latest statistics by Ethnologue, there are some 7,117 spoken languages in the world today \u2014 of which 40% (2,926) are at risk of disappearing. “A language becomes endangered when its users begin to teach and speak a more dominant language to their children,” the publication explains.<\/span><\/p>\n “Native languages are slowly being forgotten by younger generations due to fast-paced modernization,” says Larrimar Tia, Lead Developer of <\/span>Indigen<\/span>, a company that aims to preserve the heritage of indigenous cultures by creating immutable storage of their historical data on the blockchain. “Once we start forgetting our native tongue, we will also start to forget our traditions, arts, and history,” he warns.<\/span><\/p>\n A Free Association compact with the United States has resulted in the congregation of around 4,300 Marshallese in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas. It\u2019s the single largest concentration of RMI citizens outside of the homeland and, both physically and culturally, almost as far from the islands as one could be.<\/span><\/p>\n In 2018 the Global Heritage Fund argued that distributed ledger technologies could be used to preserve endangered heritage sites by tracking antiquities and documenting unique historic locations. Not only for populations in danger of extinction, but for all humanity.<\/span><\/p>\n The records of such artifacts would then be stored on an immutable ledger. They would remain \u2014 in their digital form at least \u2014 preserved on a decentralized blockchain which should theoretically help to protect against losses caused by centralized technical or human failures, suggests the Global Heritage Fund:<\/span><\/p>\n “Especially in today\u2019s tumultuous political climate, such promises are appealing. Who knows how many antiquities can be saved from looting or how much trafficking in cultural artifacts can be decreased through the widespread adoption of blockchain-based solutions?”<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Several projects began to appear around this time exploring the ways in which blockchain could safeguard <\/span>archaeological artifacts, oral history, languages, and other shared cultural elements. It would never be the same as marveling over the physical historical objects themselves. But it would ensure they couldn’t be erased from memory, accidentally lost or even deliberately destroyed.<\/span><\/p>\n “One of the limitations of traditional data storage,” says Tia, “is that it is very centralized to a single entity that manages the server. The reason why most historical data gets lost is due to lack of immutable and decentralized record keeping. Usually they limit access to a few trusted parties. But using blockchain, the records will be widely available and will never be lost.”<\/span><\/p>\n In China, Tsinghua University began to <\/span>research<\/span><\/a> how museums could store their cultural items in digital format using 3D computer models to guarantee their integrity before securing them onto a ledger.<\/span>\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The TransRossica Russian publishing company has also implemented a <\/span>similar scheme<\/span><\/a> for storing data on the Credits public blockchain. The aim is to create a specialized archive of documents on significant people throughout the history of Russia.<\/span><\/p>\n Andrew Arkhipov, Head of Communications at Credits, said “The joint service allows storing documents and materials about various historical persons on the blockchain, which will be a reliable source for preserving the cultural heritage, real historical chronicles, and facts. The project makes it possible to ensure the uniqueness, authenticity, and integrity of archives.”<\/span><\/p>\n Blockchain has also proven its worth when it comes to authenticating objects, such as indigenous art. In 2019, for example, the Australian government began a <\/span>pilot project<\/span><\/a> to label and track precious historical items in a bid to halt the trading of inauthentic indigenous art.<\/span><\/p>\n A whitepaper published to promote a project named KAPU explained the lofty goal of changing the way that archaeological and heritage data are stored using an “archaeological blockchain.” The promises of the website and whitepaper are certainly compelling:<\/span><\/p>\n “KAPU wants to use the blockchain to preserve the teachings of history and ensure that our present will be remembered by our children \u2013 in the future. This is our goal: to make traceable, accessible and usable \u2013 by anyone \u2013 everything that has contributed to building and enhancing the history of humanity.”<\/span><\/p>\n However, the project\u2019s social accounts are long-abandoned, and requests for comment were never returned.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Based in the Philippines, where the capital Manila is also at risk of being <\/span>permanently submerged<\/span><\/a> in the coming decades, Tia’s Indigen project aims to be “blockchain for the indigenous.” While that includes the preservation of languages, he says that languages are just one facet of the project that has raised funds for local schooling and kickstarted a #SaveTheRiceTerraces of Ifugao campaign.<\/span><\/p>\n “The indigenous people are usually the unintended victims of industrialization and globalization,” he says. “Therefore, Indigen was designed with a primary purpose of protecting the rights and property of the indigenous people.”<\/span><\/p>\n Part of the work carried out so far involves encouraging indigenous groups, charitable institutions, historians, anthropologists, universities, and legal professionals to donate their historical documentation for permanent preservation on a blockchain. In doing this, Indigen can “create indices which are easily accessible to be studied and used as reference points for students and researchers”.<\/span><\/p>\n Of course, with some <\/span>370 million<\/span><\/a> indigenous peoples in over 90 countries, Tia recognizes the enormity of the task. But more projects like these in local communities could really make a difference in ensuring that vast culture sets are not lost.<\/span><\/p>\nThe Global Fight for Survival<\/span><\/h4>\n
Can Blockchain Save Populations in Danger of Extinction?<\/span><\/h4>\n
Blockchain and Cultural Heritage<\/span><\/h4>\n
A Look at Blockchain-Based Solutions<\/span><\/h4>\n
Preserving Indigenous Communities<\/span><\/h4>\n