Table of Contents: These are Things That are Really Happening: Inuit Perspectives on the Evidence and Impacts of Climate Change in Nunavut by Shari Fox. Community Contributions to Ecological Monitoring: Knowledge Co-production in the U.S.-Canada Arctic Borderlands by Gary Kofinas with the communities of Aklavik, Arctic Village, Old Crow, and Fort McPherson. We Can’t Predict the Weather Like We Used to: Inuvialuit Observations of Climate Change, Sachs Harbour, Western Canadian Arctic by Dyanna Jolly, Fikret Berkes, Jennifer Castleden, Theresa Nichols, and the community of Sachs Harbour. Coastal Sea Ice Watch: Private Confessions of a Convert to Indigenous Knowledge by David Norton. Watching Ice and Weather Our Way: Some Lessons from Yupik Observations of Sea Ice and Weather on St. Lawrence Island, Alaska by Igor Krupnik. Nowadays it is Not the Same: Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, Climate and Caribou in the Kitikmeot Region of Nunavut, Canada by Natasha Thorpe, Sandra Eyegetok, Naikak Hakongak, and the Kitikmeot Elders. Travelling with Fred George: The Changing Ways of Yup’ik Star Navigation in Akiachak, Western Alaska by Claudette Bradley. Climate Change and Health in Nunavik and Laborador: Lessons from Inuit Knowledge by Christopher Furgal, Daniel Martin, and Pierre Gosselin. Putting the Human Face on Climate Change Through Community Workshops: Inuit Knowledge, Partnerships, and Research by Scott Nickels, Christopher Furgal, Jennifer Castleden, Pitseolalaq Moss-Davies, Mark Buell, Barbara Armstrong, Diane Dillon, and Robin Fonger. Epilogue: Making Sense of Arctic Environmental Change? by Fikret Berkes. Indigenous Views on Climate Change: A Circumpolar Perspective by Tero Mustonen