大洋洲的本土知识、建筑和自然

Derek Kawiti , Albert Refiti , Amanda Yates , Elisapeta Heta , Sibyl Bloomfield , Victoria Chanse , Maibritt Pedersen Zari
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摘要

这篇观点文章来源于建筑和城市设计领域领先的土著学者和实践者在2023年纽西兰惠灵顿赫伦加瓦卡维多利亚大学举行的以自然为基础的城市气候适应健康国际研讨会上的主题小组讨论。讨论的重点是Moananui大洋洲适应气候变化的土著设计,重点是与自然的关系。鉴于大洋洲莫阿纳努伊在语言、文化、历史和世界观方面的多样性,这次讨论代表了该领域土著领导和思想的独特融合。它突出了与适应气候变化的土著设计相关的关键主题,并提供了一个新颖、独特的视角,旨在推动围绕基于自然的解决方案(NbS)的思考。重要的是要承认和整合土著的价值观和方法来产生知识,特别是在学术环境中。在Moananui大洋洲的背景下,这可能需要将口头传统和格式(例如talanoa和hui或kōrero)改编成传统的基于西方的研究格式,例如期刊文章。本文试图以西方的形式捕捉重要的本土知识和讨论,以便进一步传播和分享。这意味着论文中描述的格式和方法与传统的科学期刊文章格式并不完全一致,但是讨论和发现有助于满足作者的动机,即将传统的土著共享信息的方式转变为观点文章格式,并与更广泛的受众分享见解。该方法与本文所在的特刊呼吁(Just,社会生态城市转型:基于自然的解决方案和传统生态知识)非常吻合,巩固了该领域的相关性和潜在贡献。在与自然合作的重要性的背景下,探讨了两个关键主题;生态学和tikanga(习惯做法)之间的关系,以及回顾过去以产生创新和适应能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Indigenous knowledge, architecture, and nature in the context of Oceania
This perspective article is derived from conversations between leading Indigenous academics and practitioners in the fields of architecture and urban design recorded at a keynote panel at the 2023 NUWAO International Symposium on Nature-based Urban Climate Adaptation for Wellbeing, held at Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand. The focus of the discussion was Indigenous design for adaptation to climate change in Moananui Oceania with an emphasis on relationships to nature. Given the diversity of Moananui Oceania in terms of languages, cultures, histories, and worldviews, this discussion represented a unique convergence of Indigenous leadership and thought in the field. It highlighted key themes related to Indigenous design for climate change adaptation and offered a novel, distinctive perspective aimed at advancing thinking around nature-based solutions (NbS). It is important to recognise and integrate Indigenous values and approaches to knowledge generation, particularly within academic settings. In the context of Moananui Oceania this can require adapting oral traditions and formats, such as talanoa, and hui or kōrero, into conventional Western-based research formats such as the journal article. This paper is an attempt to capture important Indigenous knowledge and discussion in a western format to enable further dissemination and sharing. This means the format and methodologies described in the paper do not align exactly with traditional scientific journal article formats, however the discussions and findings help to meet the motivation of the authors, which is to transform traditional Indigenous ways of sharing information into a perspective article format and share insights with a wider audience. This methodology aligns well with the special issue call that this paper resides in (Just, Socio-ecological Urban Transformation: Nature-based Solutions and Traditional Ecological Knowledge), underpinning the relevance and potential contribution to the field. Two key themes were explored within the context of the importance of working with nature; relationships between ecologies and tikanga (customary practices), and looking backwards to generate innovation and resilience.
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