‘Who Had to Die so I Could Go Camping?’: Shifting non-Native Conceptions of Land and Environment through Engagement with Indigenous Thought and Action

IF 1.5 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
J. Bacon, K. Whyte, Wayne Yang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT Scholarship in the area of social movements points to the importance of inter-group collaboration and alliance building. In the case of Indigenous-led movements and the issue of solidarity with non-Indigenous movement participants, scholarship at the intersection of Native studies and social movements suggests that such alliances can be built and sustained but that unlearning colonial attitudes and behaviors is central to this process. Through in-depth interviews with non-Native solidarity participants, this article considers how engagement with Indigenous thought and action re-shapes particpants’ conceptions of environment and place. Findings suggest that such involvement calls attention to histories of violence as well as ongoing practices of dispossession causing activists to grapple not only with their personal and family histories but also with their evolving relationship with environmentalism.
“为了我去露营,谁得死?”:通过参与土著思想和行动,改变非土著对土地和环境的观念
社会运动领域的学术研究指出了群体间合作和联盟建设的重要性。在土著领导的运动和与非土著运动参与者团结一致的问题上,土著研究和社会运动交叉点的学术研究表明,这种联盟可以建立和维持,但摒弃殖民态度和行为是这一过程的核心。通过对非土著团结运动参与者的深度访谈,本文探讨了参与土著思想和行动如何重塑参与者对环境和地方的概念。研究结果表明,这种参与引起了人们对暴力历史的关注,以及正在进行的剥夺行为,这些行为不仅使活动家们努力解决他们的个人和家庭历史,而且还使他们努力解决他们与环保主义之间不断发展的关系。
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来源期刊
Ethics Policy & Environment
Ethics Policy & Environment ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
10.00%
发文量
32
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