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Köp båda 2 för 3358 krThomas F. Thornton is Dean of Arts and Sciences and Vice-Provost for Research and Sponsored Programs at University of Alaska Southeast, USA, and Associate Professor (part-time) at the Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, UK. Shonil A. Bhagwat is Professor of Environment and Development, and Head of the School of Social Sciences and Global Studies at the Open University, UK. His research focuses on the links between environment and development in the context of global challenges.
1 Introduction PART I Concepts and context 2 Indigenous Ecological Knowledge: Why bother? 3 Context matters: the holism and subjectivity of environmental knowledge 4 Cultivar diversity and management as traditional environmental knowledge 5 On serving salmon: an ethnography of hyperkeystone interactions in Interior Alaska 6 Performance knowledge: uncovering the dynamics of biocultural diversity of Borneos tropical forests through a Penan hunting technique 7 Soil ethnoecology 8 Bridging paradigms: analyzing traditional Tsimane hunting with a double lens PART II Issues of perspective, values, and engagement 9 Asian and Middle Eastern pastoralists 10 Balance on every ledger: Kwakwakawakw resource values and traditional ecological management 11 Challenges surrounding education and transmission of Ainu Indigenous Ecological Knowledge in Japan: disparate valuations of a people and their IEK 12 Engaging with Indigenous Environmental Knowledge in the North American Arctic: moving from documentation to decisions in environmental governance 13 Taiga Forest reindeer herders and hunters, subsistence, stewardship 14 Tlingit engagement with salmon: the philosophy and practice of relational sustainability 15 Mtauranga as knowledge, process and practice in Aotearoa New Zealand PART III Applications of IEK for adaptation, conservation, and coexistence 16 Integrating Amazigh cultural practices in Moroccan High Atlas biodiversity conservation 17 Sacred groves of Sierra Leone: preserving Indigenous Environmental Knowledge 18 The role of biodiversity in the maintenance of ecosystem services in human-dominated landscapes: evidence from the Terai Plains of Nepal 19 Creating coexistence: traditional knowledge and institutions as a foundation for Maasai-wildlife coexistence in southern Kenya 20 Cultural keystone species as indicators of climatic changes 21 Living with elephants: indigenous world-views 22 Do dragons prevent deforestation?: The Gambias sacred forests 23 Fire, native ecological knowledge, and the enduring anthropogenic landscapes of Yosemite Valley PART IV Governance and equity 24 Who benefits? Indigenous Environmental Knowledge (IEK) in multilateral biodiversity agreements 25 The use and misuse of IEK in conservation in Vietnam 26 Including Indigenous and Local Knowledge in the work of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) Global Assessment: outcomes and lessons for the future 27 Indigenous Knowledge, knowledge-holders and marine environmental governance 28 Incorporating social-ecological systems into protected area networks: indigenous and Community Conserved Areas (ICCAs) in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo