Commonly refers to the authority a state has over itself, or over another state or people. This can include territorial, legal, political, economic, or linguistic sovereignty. While state sovereignty constitutes formally recognized and internationally legitimized control over a demarcated space, Indigenous sovereignty represents the right to self-determination in spite of the borders, laws, and restrictions imposed by a colonial nation. In the settler-colonial state of Canada, Indigenous sovereignty is crucial to Indigenous livelihood, resistance, and autonomy (see #callresponse; Liberation of the Chinook Wind). Data sovereignty—or the notion that data should be governed by those from whom it is collected—also complements Indigenous sovereignty: data sovereignty practitioners advocate for greater control and oversight in the administration, collection, and dissemination of data by its affected communities (see Algorithm; Running with Concepts: The Mediatic Edition).