Indigenous Knowledge for Climate Change Assessment and Adaptation
Herausgeber: Nakashima, Douglas; Rubis, Jennifer T.; Krupnik, Igor
Indigenous Knowledge for Climate Change Assessment and Adaptation
Herausgeber: Nakashima, Douglas; Rubis, Jennifer T.; Krupnik, Igor
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This unique transdisciplinary publication is the result of collaboration between UNESCO's Local and Indigenous Knowledge Systems (LINKS) programme, the United Nations University's Traditional Knowledge Initiative, the IPCC, and other organisations. Chapters, written by indigenous peoples, scientists and development experts, provide insight into how diverse societies observe and adapt to changing environments. A broad range of case studies illustrate how these societies, building upon traditional knowledge handed down through generations, are already developing their own solutions for dealing…mehr
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This unique transdisciplinary publication is the result of collaboration between UNESCO's Local and Indigenous Knowledge Systems (LINKS) programme, the United Nations University's Traditional Knowledge Initiative, the IPCC, and other organisations. Chapters, written by indigenous peoples, scientists and development experts, provide insight into how diverse societies observe and adapt to changing environments. A broad range of case studies illustrate how these societies, building upon traditional knowledge handed down through generations, are already developing their own solutions for dealing with a rapidly changing climate and how this might be useful on a global scale. Of interest to policy-makers, social and natural scientists, and indigenous peoples and experts, this book provides an indispensable reference for those interested in climate science, policy and adaptation.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. März 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 760g
- ISBN-13: 9781107137882
- ISBN-10: 1107137888
- Artikelnr.: 48810762
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. März 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 760g
- ISBN-13: 9781107137882
- ISBN-10: 1107137888
- Artikelnr.: 48810762
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Foreword; 1. Indigenous knowledge for climate change assessment and
adaptation: introduction Douglas Nakashima, Jennifer Rubis and Igor
Krupnik; Part I. Knowing Our Weather and Climate: 2. Forest, reef and sea
level rise in North Vanuatu: seasonal environmental practices and climate
fluctuations in Island Melanesia Carlos Mondragón; 3. Annual cycles in
indigenous Northwestern Amazon: a collaborative research towards climate
change Monitoring Aloisio Cabalzar; 4. Indigenous knowledge in the time of
climate change (with reference to Chuuk, Federated States of Micronesia)
Rosita Henry and Christine Pam; 5. Local responses to variability and
climate change by Zoque indigenous communities in Chiapas, Mexico María
Silva Sánchez Cortés and Elena Lazos Chavero; 6. Climate knowledge of Ch'ol
farmers in Chiapas, Mexico Fernando Briones; Part II. Our Changing
Homelands: 7. Indigenous forest management as a means for climate change
adaptation and mitigation Wilfredo V. Alangui, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz,
Kimaren Ole Riamit, Dennis Mairena, Edda Moreno, Waldo Muller, Frans Lakon,
Paulus Unjing, Vitalis Andi, Elias Ngiuk and Sujarni Alloy; 8. Indigenous
knowledge, history and environmental change as seen by Yolngu people of
Blue Mud Bay, Northern Australia Marcus Barber; 9. Coping with climate:
innovation and adaptation in Tibetan land use and agriculture Jan Salick,
Anja Byg, Katie Konchar and Robbie Hart; 10. Seasonal environmental
practices and climate fluctuations in Island Melanesia: transformations in
a regional system in Eastern Papua New Guinea Frederick H. Damon; 11.
Traditional knowledge and crop varieties as adaptation to climate change in
SW China, the Bolivian Andes and Coastal Kenya Krystyna Swiderska, Hannah
Reid, Yiching Song, Jingsong Li, Doris Mutta, Paul Ongugo, Mohamed Pakia,
Rolando Oros and Sandra Barriga; Part III. Confronting Extreme Events: 12.
Accounts from tribal elders: increasing vulnerability of the Navajo People
to Drought and Climate Change in the Southwestern United States Margaret H.
Redsteer, Klara Kelley, Harris Francis and Debra Block; 13. The spirits are
leaving: adaptation and the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean coast of
Nicaragua Mirna Cunningham Kain; 14. Indigenous reindeer herding and
adaptation to new hazards in the Arctic Svein D. Mathiesen, Mathis P.
Bongo, P. Burgess, Robert W. Corell, Anna Degteva, Inger Marie G. Eira,
Inger Hanssen-Bauer, Alvaro Ivanoff, Ole Henrik Magga, Nancy G. Maynard,
Anders Oskal, Mikhail Pogodaev, Mikkel N. Sara, Dagrun Vikhamar Schuler and
Ellen Inga Turi; 15. 'Everything that is happening now is beyond our
capacity' - Nyangatom livelihoods under threat Sabine Troeger; Part IV.
Sources of Indigenous Strength and Resilience: 16. 'Normal' catastrophes or
harbinger of climate change? Reindeer-herding Sami facing dire winters in
Northern Sweden Marie Roué; 17. Canaries of civilization: small island
vulnerability, past adaptations and sea level rise Marjorie V. C. Falanruw;
18. Peasants of the Amazonian-Andes and their conversations with climate
change in the region of San Martin Rider Panduro; 19. People of the whales:
climate change and cultural survival among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska
Chie Sakakibara; 20. Indigenous knowledge for climate change assessment and
adaptation: epilogue Igor Krupnik, Jennifer Rubis and Douglas Nakashima;
Index.
adaptation: introduction Douglas Nakashima, Jennifer Rubis and Igor
Krupnik; Part I. Knowing Our Weather and Climate: 2. Forest, reef and sea
level rise in North Vanuatu: seasonal environmental practices and climate
fluctuations in Island Melanesia Carlos Mondragón; 3. Annual cycles in
indigenous Northwestern Amazon: a collaborative research towards climate
change Monitoring Aloisio Cabalzar; 4. Indigenous knowledge in the time of
climate change (with reference to Chuuk, Federated States of Micronesia)
Rosita Henry and Christine Pam; 5. Local responses to variability and
climate change by Zoque indigenous communities in Chiapas, Mexico María
Silva Sánchez Cortés and Elena Lazos Chavero; 6. Climate knowledge of Ch'ol
farmers in Chiapas, Mexico Fernando Briones; Part II. Our Changing
Homelands: 7. Indigenous forest management as a means for climate change
adaptation and mitigation Wilfredo V. Alangui, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz,
Kimaren Ole Riamit, Dennis Mairena, Edda Moreno, Waldo Muller, Frans Lakon,
Paulus Unjing, Vitalis Andi, Elias Ngiuk and Sujarni Alloy; 8. Indigenous
knowledge, history and environmental change as seen by Yolngu people of
Blue Mud Bay, Northern Australia Marcus Barber; 9. Coping with climate:
innovation and adaptation in Tibetan land use and agriculture Jan Salick,
Anja Byg, Katie Konchar and Robbie Hart; 10. Seasonal environmental
practices and climate fluctuations in Island Melanesia: transformations in
a regional system in Eastern Papua New Guinea Frederick H. Damon; 11.
Traditional knowledge and crop varieties as adaptation to climate change in
SW China, the Bolivian Andes and Coastal Kenya Krystyna Swiderska, Hannah
Reid, Yiching Song, Jingsong Li, Doris Mutta, Paul Ongugo, Mohamed Pakia,
Rolando Oros and Sandra Barriga; Part III. Confronting Extreme Events: 12.
Accounts from tribal elders: increasing vulnerability of the Navajo People
to Drought and Climate Change in the Southwestern United States Margaret H.
Redsteer, Klara Kelley, Harris Francis and Debra Block; 13. The spirits are
leaving: adaptation and the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean coast of
Nicaragua Mirna Cunningham Kain; 14. Indigenous reindeer herding and
adaptation to new hazards in the Arctic Svein D. Mathiesen, Mathis P.
Bongo, P. Burgess, Robert W. Corell, Anna Degteva, Inger Marie G. Eira,
Inger Hanssen-Bauer, Alvaro Ivanoff, Ole Henrik Magga, Nancy G. Maynard,
Anders Oskal, Mikhail Pogodaev, Mikkel N. Sara, Dagrun Vikhamar Schuler and
Ellen Inga Turi; 15. 'Everything that is happening now is beyond our
capacity' - Nyangatom livelihoods under threat Sabine Troeger; Part IV.
Sources of Indigenous Strength and Resilience: 16. 'Normal' catastrophes or
harbinger of climate change? Reindeer-herding Sami facing dire winters in
Northern Sweden Marie Roué; 17. Canaries of civilization: small island
vulnerability, past adaptations and sea level rise Marjorie V. C. Falanruw;
18. Peasants of the Amazonian-Andes and their conversations with climate
change in the region of San Martin Rider Panduro; 19. People of the whales:
climate change and cultural survival among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska
Chie Sakakibara; 20. Indigenous knowledge for climate change assessment and
adaptation: epilogue Igor Krupnik, Jennifer Rubis and Douglas Nakashima;
Index.
Foreword; 1. Indigenous knowledge for climate change assessment and
adaptation: introduction Douglas Nakashima, Jennifer Rubis and Igor
Krupnik; Part I. Knowing Our Weather and Climate: 2. Forest, reef and sea
level rise in North Vanuatu: seasonal environmental practices and climate
fluctuations in Island Melanesia Carlos Mondragón; 3. Annual cycles in
indigenous Northwestern Amazon: a collaborative research towards climate
change Monitoring Aloisio Cabalzar; 4. Indigenous knowledge in the time of
climate change (with reference to Chuuk, Federated States of Micronesia)
Rosita Henry and Christine Pam; 5. Local responses to variability and
climate change by Zoque indigenous communities in Chiapas, Mexico María
Silva Sánchez Cortés and Elena Lazos Chavero; 6. Climate knowledge of Ch'ol
farmers in Chiapas, Mexico Fernando Briones; Part II. Our Changing
Homelands: 7. Indigenous forest management as a means for climate change
adaptation and mitigation Wilfredo V. Alangui, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz,
Kimaren Ole Riamit, Dennis Mairena, Edda Moreno, Waldo Muller, Frans Lakon,
Paulus Unjing, Vitalis Andi, Elias Ngiuk and Sujarni Alloy; 8. Indigenous
knowledge, history and environmental change as seen by Yolngu people of
Blue Mud Bay, Northern Australia Marcus Barber; 9. Coping with climate:
innovation and adaptation in Tibetan land use and agriculture Jan Salick,
Anja Byg, Katie Konchar and Robbie Hart; 10. Seasonal environmental
practices and climate fluctuations in Island Melanesia: transformations in
a regional system in Eastern Papua New Guinea Frederick H. Damon; 11.
Traditional knowledge and crop varieties as adaptation to climate change in
SW China, the Bolivian Andes and Coastal Kenya Krystyna Swiderska, Hannah
Reid, Yiching Song, Jingsong Li, Doris Mutta, Paul Ongugo, Mohamed Pakia,
Rolando Oros and Sandra Barriga; Part III. Confronting Extreme Events: 12.
Accounts from tribal elders: increasing vulnerability of the Navajo People
to Drought and Climate Change in the Southwestern United States Margaret H.
Redsteer, Klara Kelley, Harris Francis and Debra Block; 13. The spirits are
leaving: adaptation and the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean coast of
Nicaragua Mirna Cunningham Kain; 14. Indigenous reindeer herding and
adaptation to new hazards in the Arctic Svein D. Mathiesen, Mathis P.
Bongo, P. Burgess, Robert W. Corell, Anna Degteva, Inger Marie G. Eira,
Inger Hanssen-Bauer, Alvaro Ivanoff, Ole Henrik Magga, Nancy G. Maynard,
Anders Oskal, Mikhail Pogodaev, Mikkel N. Sara, Dagrun Vikhamar Schuler and
Ellen Inga Turi; 15. 'Everything that is happening now is beyond our
capacity' - Nyangatom livelihoods under threat Sabine Troeger; Part IV.
Sources of Indigenous Strength and Resilience: 16. 'Normal' catastrophes or
harbinger of climate change? Reindeer-herding Sami facing dire winters in
Northern Sweden Marie Roué; 17. Canaries of civilization: small island
vulnerability, past adaptations and sea level rise Marjorie V. C. Falanruw;
18. Peasants of the Amazonian-Andes and their conversations with climate
change in the region of San Martin Rider Panduro; 19. People of the whales:
climate change and cultural survival among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska
Chie Sakakibara; 20. Indigenous knowledge for climate change assessment and
adaptation: epilogue Igor Krupnik, Jennifer Rubis and Douglas Nakashima;
Index.
adaptation: introduction Douglas Nakashima, Jennifer Rubis and Igor
Krupnik; Part I. Knowing Our Weather and Climate: 2. Forest, reef and sea
level rise in North Vanuatu: seasonal environmental practices and climate
fluctuations in Island Melanesia Carlos Mondragón; 3. Annual cycles in
indigenous Northwestern Amazon: a collaborative research towards climate
change Monitoring Aloisio Cabalzar; 4. Indigenous knowledge in the time of
climate change (with reference to Chuuk, Federated States of Micronesia)
Rosita Henry and Christine Pam; 5. Local responses to variability and
climate change by Zoque indigenous communities in Chiapas, Mexico María
Silva Sánchez Cortés and Elena Lazos Chavero; 6. Climate knowledge of Ch'ol
farmers in Chiapas, Mexico Fernando Briones; Part II. Our Changing
Homelands: 7. Indigenous forest management as a means for climate change
adaptation and mitigation Wilfredo V. Alangui, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz,
Kimaren Ole Riamit, Dennis Mairena, Edda Moreno, Waldo Muller, Frans Lakon,
Paulus Unjing, Vitalis Andi, Elias Ngiuk and Sujarni Alloy; 8. Indigenous
knowledge, history and environmental change as seen by Yolngu people of
Blue Mud Bay, Northern Australia Marcus Barber; 9. Coping with climate:
innovation and adaptation in Tibetan land use and agriculture Jan Salick,
Anja Byg, Katie Konchar and Robbie Hart; 10. Seasonal environmental
practices and climate fluctuations in Island Melanesia: transformations in
a regional system in Eastern Papua New Guinea Frederick H. Damon; 11.
Traditional knowledge and crop varieties as adaptation to climate change in
SW China, the Bolivian Andes and Coastal Kenya Krystyna Swiderska, Hannah
Reid, Yiching Song, Jingsong Li, Doris Mutta, Paul Ongugo, Mohamed Pakia,
Rolando Oros and Sandra Barriga; Part III. Confronting Extreme Events: 12.
Accounts from tribal elders: increasing vulnerability of the Navajo People
to Drought and Climate Change in the Southwestern United States Margaret H.
Redsteer, Klara Kelley, Harris Francis and Debra Block; 13. The spirits are
leaving: adaptation and the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean coast of
Nicaragua Mirna Cunningham Kain; 14. Indigenous reindeer herding and
adaptation to new hazards in the Arctic Svein D. Mathiesen, Mathis P.
Bongo, P. Burgess, Robert W. Corell, Anna Degteva, Inger Marie G. Eira,
Inger Hanssen-Bauer, Alvaro Ivanoff, Ole Henrik Magga, Nancy G. Maynard,
Anders Oskal, Mikhail Pogodaev, Mikkel N. Sara, Dagrun Vikhamar Schuler and
Ellen Inga Turi; 15. 'Everything that is happening now is beyond our
capacity' - Nyangatom livelihoods under threat Sabine Troeger; Part IV.
Sources of Indigenous Strength and Resilience: 16. 'Normal' catastrophes or
harbinger of climate change? Reindeer-herding Sami facing dire winters in
Northern Sweden Marie Roué; 17. Canaries of civilization: small island
vulnerability, past adaptations and sea level rise Marjorie V. C. Falanruw;
18. Peasants of the Amazonian-Andes and their conversations with climate
change in the region of San Martin Rider Panduro; 19. People of the whales:
climate change and cultural survival among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska
Chie Sakakibara; 20. Indigenous knowledge for climate change assessment and
adaptation: epilogue Igor Krupnik, Jennifer Rubis and Douglas Nakashima;
Index.