Indigenous Fire Futures

Deniss J. Martinez, Bruno Seraphin, Tony Marks-Block, Peter Nelson, Kirsten Vinyeta
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Abstract

Abstract Dominant causal explanations of the wildfire threat in California include anthropogenic climate change, fire suppression, industrial logging, and the expansion of residential settlements, which are all products of settler colonial property regimes and structures of resource extraction. Settler colonialism is grounded in Indigenous erasure and dispossession through militarism and incarceration, which are prominent tools in California's fire industrial complex. To challenge settler colonial frameworks within fire management, Indigenous peoples are organizing to expand Indigenous cultural controlled burning, fire stewardship, and sovereignty. These initiatives emphasize reciprocal human-fire relations and uphold Indigenous knowledge systems and livelihoods. Concurrently, Indigenous fire sovereignty is threatened by knowledge appropriation and superficial collaborations. In this article, we review contemporary research on Indigenous burning in order to highlight the strategies that Indigenous communities and scholars employ to subvert colonial power relations within wildfire management and actualize regenerative Indigenous futures.
土着火期货
加州野火威胁的主要因果解释包括人为气候变化、灭火、工业伐木和住宅定居点扩张,这些都是定居者殖民财产制度和资源开采结构的产物。定居者殖民主义的基础是通过军国主义和监禁对土著居民的抹除和剥夺,这是加州消防工业综合体的主要工具。为了挑战定居者在火灾管理方面的殖民框架,土著人民正在组织扩大土著文化控制燃烧,消防管理和主权。这些举措强调人火互惠关系,维护土著知识体系和生计。同时,土著居民的消防主权受到知识占有和表面合作的威胁。在本文中,我们回顾了土著燃烧的当代研究,以突出土著社区和学者在野火管理中颠覆殖民权力关系并实现再生土著未来的策略。
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