地球(仍然)是我们的母亲

Chad S. Hamill
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引用次数: 0

摘要

正如许多土著人民举行的大规模抗议活动所表明的那样,土著社区居住的土地(如沙漠边缘、小岛、湖泊和河流、高海拔地区和环极地北极地区)特别容易受到目前正在发生的巨大气候变化的影响。土著社区赖以生存的脆弱的生态系统在不断变化,气候变化的加速速度超过了最可怕的科学预测,构成了一场与欧洲殖民主义遗产一样具有威胁性的危机。幸运的是,几千年来,土著社区已经培养了对其生态的密切认识,并且在整个世界范围的工业破坏时代仍然善于适应环境变化。在传统生态知识(TEK)的框架内对这种意识和适应能力进行了讨论。本章将以土著社区的传统故事和歌曲为试金石,探讨TEK的三个相互关联的方面:(1)其在协助土著社区适应气候变化影响方面的作用;(2)为西方产生的气候科学提供信息和影响的潜力;(3)它有望成为将土著社区联系在一起、加强全球自决的统一纽带。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Earth Is (Still) Our Mother
As many large-scale protests by Indigenous people have articulated, lands inhabited by Indigenous communities (such as desert margins, small islands, lakes and rivers, high-altitude zones, and the circumpolar Arctic) are particularly vulnerable to the dramatic shifts in climate currently underway. The delicate ecosystems upon which Indigenous communities rely are in flux, and the accelerating rate of climate change—outpacing the direst scientific projections—amounts to a crisis that is every bit as threatening as the legacy of European colonialism. Fortunately, for millennia Indigenous communities have cultivated an intimate awareness of their ecology and have remained, throughout the era of world-wide industrial devastation, adept at adapting to environmental change. This awareness and adaptive power has been discussed within the framework of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). Using traditional stories and songs in Indigenous communities as a touchstone, this chapter will explore three interrelated aspects of TEK: (1) its role in assisting Indigenous communities in adapting to the effects of climate change; (2) its potential to inform and influence Western-generated climate science; and (3) its promise as a unifying thread tying Indigenous communities together, strengthening global self-determination.
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