Sustainable mindsets: Combining traditional indigenous knowledge with non-aboriginal understanding to address environmental risks

IF 1.4 2区 社会学 Q2 ETHNIC STUDIES
Rhonda Oliver, Rachel Sheffield, Ronita Bradshaw, Jacqui Hunter, Sarah Nowers, Briana Taylor-Ellison
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are the traditional owners of Australia. It has been predicted that they have been the custodians of these lands for at least 60,000 years. Their traditional lands are inextricably linked to their languages, cultural practices and spiritual being. As the custodians they have used their traditional Indigenous knowledge to care for the land – its plants, animals and waterways, protecting unique ecosystems and maintaining sustainability. In fact, their traditional understanding reflects what has been described in the literature as a sustainable mindset. We come together as non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal educators to explore how environmental threats within the epoc of Anthropocene may be addressed using such a sustainable mindset – one reflecting both indigeneity and posthumanism perspectives. We describe three case studies showing how the use of traditional knowledge held by local Indigenous communities (IPLCs) can be used with non-Indigenous knowledge to address human induced planetary changes to protect important animal species and the land on which they live. We draw on written and oral reports from our Indigenous co-authors and data obtained informally from them by way of ‘yarning’. We describe how in the north-west of Western Australia areas of significant ecological and cultural value are being negatively affected by human-induced change threatening different animal species and ecosystems. We outline the effects of light pollution in Port Hedland and how this is disrupting the life cycle of the flatback sea turtle - culturally significant sea animals. As a point of comparison, we next describe how green back turtle and Dugong populations are being protected and sustained on the Dampier Peninsula using traditional knowledge more recently supplemented through the work of the Bardi Jawi Rangers. Finally, we examine how the Fitzroy River catchment area is increasingly under threat from water extraction and mining, but how a sustainable mindset can be used to obviate these environmental risks.
可持续的思维方式:将传统土著知识与非土著理解相结合,应对环境风险
土著居民和托雷斯海峡岛民是澳大利亚的传统主人。据预测,他们看管这些土地至少有6万年了。他们的传统土地与他们的语言、文化习俗和精神存在不可分割地联系在一起。作为保管人,他们利用自己的传统土著知识照顾土地——植物、动物和水道,保护独特的生态系统,保持可持续性。事实上,他们的传统理解反映了文献中所描述的可持续思维模式。我们聚集在一起,作为非土著和土著教育工作者,探讨如何使用这种可持续的思维方式来解决人类世时代的环境威胁,这种思维方式反映了土著和后人类主义的观点。我们描述了三个案例研究,展示了如何利用当地土著社区(iplc)持有的传统知识与非土著知识相结合,以应对人类引起的地球变化,以保护重要的动物物种及其赖以生存的土地。我们利用土著共同作者的书面和口头报告,以及通过“纱线”从他们那里非正式获得的数据。我们描述了西澳大利亚州西北部具有重要生态和文化价值的地区如何受到人类引起的变化的负面影响,这些变化威胁着不同的动物物种和生态系统。我们概述了黑德兰港光污染的影响,以及它是如何破坏平背海龟的生命周期的——平背海龟是一种具有重要文化意义的海洋动物。作为一个比较点,我们接下来描述了如何利用传统知识保护和维持丹皮尔半岛上的绿背龟和儒艮种群,这些传统知识最近通过巴迪加威护林员的工作得到了补充。最后,我们研究了菲茨罗伊河集水区如何日益受到取水和采矿的威胁,以及如何使用可持续的思维方式来避免这些环境风险。
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来源期刊
Ethnicities
Ethnicities ETHNIC STUDIES-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
47
期刊介绍: There is currently a burgeoning interest in both sociology and politics around questions of ethnicity, nationalism and related issues such as identity politics and minority rights. Ethnicities is a cross-disciplinary journal that will provide a critical dialogue between these debates in sociology and politics, and related disciplines. Ethnicities has three broad aims, each of which adds a new and distinctive dimension to the academic analysis of ethnicity, nationalism, identity politics and minority rights.
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