NOME, Alaska - July 6, 2026 - PRLog -- The Human Resilience Project (THRP) is preparing its third field investigation in a ten-nation study of how communities sustain psychological and social resilience under existential pressure, this time partnering with the Iñupiat of Nome, Alaska. The mission is carried under an Explorers Club flag and will carry a Rolex Explorers Club watch. It will document how an Arctic community maintains cohesion as permafrost melt and catastrophic flooding destabilize the ground beneath their homes and infrastructure.
The Arctic is warming four times faster than the rest of the planet. Near Nome, that acceleration has become an immediate crisis: liquefying permafrost undermines roads and buildings, coastlines erode, and villages face relocation as land stable for millennia becomes uninhabitable within a single generation. The Iñupiat invited THRP to document how they sustain psychological and social cohesion inside that transformation, knowledge that climate-vulnerable communities worldwide will need as Arctic warming accelerates.
THRP is partnering directly with Fred A. Eningowuk, an enrolled member of the Nome Eskimo Community. Eningowuk has directed Basic Food Employment Training at Northwest Indian College, serves as board treasurer and loan committee chair for his tribal Community Development Financial Institution, and sits on an Elder Advisory committee for an Alaska Village Corporation. His work connects tribal students with career resources while preserving elder knowledge, a mission that aligns directly with THRP's methodology of treating community members as knowledge-holders and research partners rather than research subjects.
Led by principal investigator Dr. Constance Scharff, THRP's team will spend Alaska's brief summer access window in conversation with Iñupiat elders, community members, and Arctic climate scientists to identify the specific cultural practices and social structures that sustain resilience when the physical world itself becomes unreliable. The team's methodology centers Indigenous research methods, including reciprocity, community ownership of findings, and oral storytelling as a legitimate form of knowledge alongside conventional field methods.
"What sustains Arctic communities through this crisis is knowledge that climate-vulnerable populations worldwide urgently need," said Scharff. "The Iñupiat are not subjects of this research. They are the experts we came to learn from."
This is THRP's third field investigation in a ten-nation study that began with the Gabra of northern Kenya in 2025 and continued with the Māori of Aotearoa/New Zealand. The Alaska mission is the third THRP expedition to carry both an Explorers Club flag and Rolex watch, a designation reserved for expeditions the Club and Rolex judge to meet a standard of scientific merit and exploration significance. Later legs of the series will bring the team to the Sawhoyamaxa of Paraguay's Gran Chaco and additional remote communities worldwide, building toward a synthesizing book due in 2028.
For more information about The Human Resilience Project or this expedition, visit www.THRProject.com.
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Source: The Human Resilience Project
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