<p><span>This book explores how the landscapes in indigenous territories are rapidly changing due to increased global industrial demand. This deforestation and urbanization have isolated the indigenous people from practicing ‘traditional ways of life.’ Portrayed in this book is the indigenous people
Acknowledging Indigenous Knowledge: Voices of Tropical Forest People (Urbanization, Industrialization, and the Environment)
✍ Scribed by Purabi Bose
- Publisher
- CRC Press
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 108
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book explores how the landscapes in indigenous territories are rapidly changing due to increased global industrial demand. This deforestation and urbanization have isolated the indigenous people from practicing ‘traditional ways of life.’ Portrayed in this book is the indigenous people’s perspective of their indigenous knowledge (IK) about the environment and why losing IK is a threat to humans, wildlife, and nature. Insight is shared into why acknowledging IK as a science can help solve climate change, food and nutrition insecurity, and increasing new types of pandemics through evidence‑based stories from indigenous people.
Features:
• Bridges the fractured space between science and nature.
• Documents the perspectives of indigenous peoples about their ancestral knowledge.
• Provides ethnographic qualitative comparative case studies of forest‑dwelling indigenous peoples over a 19‑year period.
• Covers largely remote indigenous territories of ten tropical countries in the Global South.
• Provides evidence‑based stories examining indigenous knowledge’s role in the tropics in preserving diverse landscapes and providing nature‑based solutions.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
This handbook of locally based agricultural practices brings together the best of science and farmer experimentation, vividly illustrating the enormous diversity of shifting cultivation systems as well as the power of human ingenuity. Environmentalists have tended to disparage shifting cultivation (
How should new knowledge systems for the academy be reflective of a 60,000-year-old Aboriginal histories? The 10 chapters by Indigenous and Non-Indigenous academics from the NIKERI Institute offer an answer to this question with generative and sometimes challenging narratives and addresses a unique
How should new knowledge systems for the academy be reflective of a 60,000-year-old Aboriginal histories? The 10 chapters by Indigenous and Non-Indigenous academics from the NIKERI Institute offer an answer to this question with generative and sometimes challenging narratives and addresses a unique