Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-anr-10.1177_20530196211057026 for Toward productive complicity: A... more Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-anr-10.1177_20530196211057026 for Toward productive complicity: Applying 'traditional ecological knowledge' in environmental science by Benedict E Singleton, Maris Boyd Gillette, Anders Burman and Carina Green in The Anthropocene Review
Culture and tradition have long been the domains of social science, particularly social/cultural ... more Culture and tradition have long been the domains of social science, particularly social/cultural anthropology and various forms of heritage studies. However, many environmental scientists whose research addresses environmental management, conservation, and restoration are also interested in traditional ecological knowledge, indigenous and local knowledge, and local environmental knowledge (hereafter TEK), not least because policymakers and international institutions promote the incorporation of TEK in environmental work. In this article, we examine TEK usage in peer-reviewed articles by environmental scientists published in 2020. This snapshot of environmental science scholarship includes both critical discussions of how to incorporate TEK in research and management and efforts to do so for various scholarly and applied purposes. Drawing on anthropological discussions of culture, we identify two related patterns within this literature: a tendency toward essentialism and a tendency t...
Ett varldsarvs lokala verklighet : Maktstrukturer och identitetsproceser kring forvaltningen av d... more Ett varldsarvs lokala verklighet : Maktstrukturer och identitetsproceser kring forvaltningen av det samiska kulturarvet inom Laponia
Conservation management systems which include indigenous traditional knowledge have increasingly ... more Conservation management systems which include indigenous traditional knowledge have increasingly been recognized by international conservation authorities as complementary or even superior to the m ...
Today, there are nearly 1000 World Heritage sites on our planet. Many of them are established on ... more Today, there are nearly 1000 World Heritage sites on our planet. Many of them are established on the traditional lands of indigenous peoples and therefore entail indigenous peoples’ interests and c ...
This study deals with the implications of implementing the World Heritage site of Laponia in nort... more This study deals with the implications of implementing the World Heritage site of Laponia in northern Sweden. Laponia, consisting of previously well-known national parks such as Stora Sjofallet and ...
Indigenous Peoples and World Heritage Sites – Normative Heritage Discourses and Possibilities for... more Indigenous Peoples and World Heritage Sites – Normative Heritage Discourses and Possibilities for Change.
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-anr-10.1177_20530196211057026 for Toward productive complicity: A... more Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-anr-10.1177_20530196211057026 for Toward productive complicity: Applying 'traditional ecological knowledge' in environmental science by Benedict E Singleton, Maris Boyd Gillette, Anders Burman and Carina Green in The Anthropocene Review
Culture and tradition have long been the domains of social science, particularly social/cultural ... more Culture and tradition have long been the domains of social science, particularly social/cultural anthropology and various forms of heritage studies. However, many environmental scientists whose research addresses environmental management, conservation, and restoration are also interested in traditional ecological knowledge, indigenous and local knowledge, and local environmental knowledge (hereafter TEK), not least because policymakers and international institutions promote the incorporation of TEK in environmental work. In this article, we examine TEK usage in peer-reviewed articles by environmental scientists published in 2020. This snapshot of environmental science scholarship includes both critical discussions of how to incorporate TEK in research and management and efforts to do so for various scholarly and applied purposes. Drawing on anthropological discussions of culture, we identify two related patterns within this literature: a tendency toward essentialism and a tendency t...
Ett varldsarvs lokala verklighet : Maktstrukturer och identitetsproceser kring forvaltningen av d... more Ett varldsarvs lokala verklighet : Maktstrukturer och identitetsproceser kring forvaltningen av det samiska kulturarvet inom Laponia
Conservation management systems which include indigenous traditional knowledge have increasingly ... more Conservation management systems which include indigenous traditional knowledge have increasingly been recognized by international conservation authorities as complementary or even superior to the m ...
Today, there are nearly 1000 World Heritage sites on our planet. Many of them are established on ... more Today, there are nearly 1000 World Heritage sites on our planet. Many of them are established on the traditional lands of indigenous peoples and therefore entail indigenous peoples’ interests and c ...
This study deals with the implications of implementing the World Heritage site of Laponia in nort... more This study deals with the implications of implementing the World Heritage site of Laponia in northern Sweden. Laponia, consisting of previously well-known national parks such as Stora Sjofallet and ...
Indigenous Peoples and World Heritage Sites – Normative Heritage Discourses and Possibilities for... more Indigenous Peoples and World Heritage Sites – Normative Heritage Discourses and Possibilities for Change.
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