马达加斯加西南部环境考古走向公正包容

IF 1.6 2区 历史学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Kristina G. Douglass, E. Morales, George Manahira, Felicia Fenomanana, Roger Samba, François Lahiniriko, Zafy Maharesy Chrisostome, Voahirana Vavisoa, Patricia Soafiavy, Ricky Justome, Harson Léonce, Laurence Hubertine, B. Pierre, Carnah Tahirisoa, Christoph Sakisy Colomb, Fleurita Soamampionona Lovanirina, Vanillah Andriankaja, R. Robison
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引用次数: 23

摘要

在这篇论文中,我们提倡一种合作的方法来调查马达加斯加西南部过去的人类与环境相互作用。我们通过作为一个团队批判性地反思莫伦贝考古项目的发展来做到这一点,该项目于2011年由一位美国考古学家和Velondriake海洋保护区的Vezo社区合作发起。我们的目标是评估我们与不同的地方、土著和后裔社区建立合作伙伴关系的轨迹,并为环境考古新合作项目的发展提供具体建议。通过马达加斯加的案例研究,我们认为,当代环境和经济挑战迫切需要阐明和实践包容性的环境考古,我们建议环境考古学家必须特别努力,将当地、土著和后裔社区纳入其中。最后,我们断言,充分合作涉及平等的权力分享和相互知识交流,并提出了一种对合作项目进行批判性自我评价的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Toward a just and inclusive environmental archaeology of southwest Madagascar
In this paper, we advocate a collaborative approach to investigating past human–environment interactions in southwest Madagascar. We do so by critically reflecting as a team on the development of the Morombe Archaeological Project, initiated in 2011 as a collaboration between an American archaeologist and the Vezo communities of the Velondriake Marine Protected Area. Our objectives are to assess our trajectory in building collaborative partnerships with diverse local, indigenous, and descendent communities and to provide concrete suggestions for the development of new collaborative projects in environmental archaeology. Through our Madagascar case study, we argue that contemporary environmental and economic challenges create an urgency to articulate and practice an inclusive environmental archaeology, and we propose that environmental archaeologists must make particular efforts to include local, indigenous, and descendent communities. Finally, we assert that full collaboration involves equal power sharing and mutual knowledge exchange and suggest an approach for critical self-evaluation of collaborative projects.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
8.30%
发文量
9
期刊介绍: The Journal of Social Archaeology is a fully peer reviewed international journal that promotes interdisciplinary research focused on social approaches in archaeology, opening up new debates and areas of exploration. It engages with and contributes to theoretical developments from other related disciplines such as feminism, queer theory, postcolonialism, social geography, literary theory, politics, anthropology, cognitive studies and behavioural science. It is explicitly global in outlook with temporal parameters from prehistory to recent periods. As well as promoting innovative social interpretations of the past, it also encourages an exploration of contemporary politics and heritage issues.
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