Traditional Lifeways and Storytelling: Tools for Adaptation and Resilience to Ecosystem Change
Tóm tắt
We collected data through three focus groups conducted with Wabanaki citizens (members of the Penobscot Nation, Passamaquoddy Tribe, Maliseet, and Micmac Nations) residing in Maine, USA, and the Canadian Maritime region. These sessions used a collective storytelling and discussion approach consistent with Wabanaki cultural practices to explore environmental knowledge, information on environmental change, and its impact on traditional lifeways (TLW) over time. Wild foods such as fiddleheads (Matteucia strutiopteris (L.) Tod.), berries such as blackberries (Rubus allegheniensis & R. Canadensis) and strawberries (Fragaria x ananasa), deer (Odocoileus virginianus Zimmerman), fish, and seafood provide not only physical nourishment, but also cultural connections through storytelling, harvesting, processing, and sharing of resources. It is this strong and multifaceted dependence on natural resources and systems that makes Wabanaki citizens particularly “vulnerable” to climate change, but also potentially resilient because of stories and other cultural traditions that help process and understand environmental change. We suggest storytelling continues to remain relevant as a way to connect the generations and for continued adaptation to ecosystem change and sustaining traditions.
Tài liệu tham khảo
citation_journal_title=Frontiers in Ecology; citation_title=Adaptive co-management for social-ecological complexity; citation_author=DR Armitage, R Plummer, F Berkes, RI Arthur, AT Charles, IJ Davidson-Hunt, AP Diduck, NC Doubleday, DS Johnson, M Marschke, P McConnery, EW Pinkerton, EK Wollenberg; citation_volume=7; citation_issue=2; citation_publication_date=2009; citation_pages=95-102; citation_doi=10.1890/070089; citation_id=CR1
citation_journal_title=Human Ecology; citation_title=The same, but different: Indigenous knowledge retention, erosion, and innovation in the Brazilian amazon; citation_author=S Athayde, J Silva-Lugo, M Schmink, M Heckenberger; citation_volume=45; citation_publication_date=2017; citation_pages=533-544; citation_doi=10.1007/s10745-017-9919-0; citation_id=CR2
citation_journal_title=GeoJournal; citation_title=Stakeholders’ perception of the impacts of invasive exotic plant species in the Mediterranean region; citation_author=D Bardsley, G Edwards-Jones; citation_volume=65; citation_issue=3; citation_publication_date=2006; citation_pages=199-210; citation_doi=10.1007/s10708-005-2755-6; citation_id=CR3
citation_journal_title=Regional Environmental Change; citation_title=Communities and change in the anthropocene: understanding socio-ecological vulnerability and planning adaptations to multiple interacting exposures; citation_author=NJ Bennett, J Blythe, S Tyler, NC Ban; citation_volume=16; citation_publication_date=2016; citation_pages=907-926; citation_doi=10.1007/s10113-015-0839-5; citation_id=CR4
Bennett T. M. B., Maynard N. G., Cochran P., Gough R., Lynn K., Maldonado J., Voggesser G., Wotkyns S., and Cozzetto K. (2014). Indigenous Peoples, Lands, and Resources. In Melillo J. M., Terese T., Richmond C., and Yohe G. W. (eds.), Climate Change Impacts in the United States: The Third National Climate Assessment, U.S. Global Change Research Program, pp. 297–317.
citation_journal_title=Ecological Applications; citation_title=Rediscovery of traditional ecological knowledge as adaptive management; citation_author=F Berkes, J Colding, C Folke; citation_volume=10; citation_issue=5; citation_publication_date=2000; citation_pages=1251-1262; citation_doi=10.1890/1051-0761(2000)010[1251:ROTEKA]2.0.CO;2; citation_id=CR6
citation_journal_title=International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies; citation_title=The Reciprocity Principle and Traditional Ecological Knowledge; citation_author=Lisa T Brooks, Cassandra Brooks; citation_volume=3; citation_issue=2; citation_publication_date=2010; citation_pages=11-28; citation_doi=10.5204/ijcis.v3i2.49; citation_id=CR7
citation_title=Our beloved kin: a new history of the King Philip's War; citation_publication_date=2018; citation_id=CR8; citation_author=LT Brooks; citation_publisher=Yale University Press
citation_title=Indigenous Experiences in the U.S. with Climate Change and Environmental Stewardship in the Anthropocene; citation_inbook_title=Forest Conservation and Management in the Anthropocene: Conference Proceedings; citation_publication_date=2014; citation_id=CR9; citation_author=K Chief; citation_author=J Daigle; citation_author=K Lynn; citation_author=KP Whyte; citation_publisher=RMRS-P-71, US Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station
citation_title=Qualitative Inquiry and Research Design; choosing among five approaches; citation_publication_date=2013; citation_id=CR10; citation_author=JW Creswell; citation_publisher=Sage
citation_title=Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists and the Ecology of New England; citation_publication_date=1983; citation_id=CR11; citation_author=W Cronon; citation_publisher=Hill and Wang
citation_journal_title=PNAS; citation_title=Using narratives and storytelling to communicate science with non-expert audiences; citation_author=MJ Dahlstrom; citation_volume=111; citation_issue=Suppl 4; citation_publication_date=2014; citation_pages=13614-13620; citation_doi=10.1073/pnas.1320645111; citation_id=CR12
citation_title=The meaning of a changed environment: initial assessment of climate change impacts in Maine—indigenous peoples; citation_inbook_title=Maine’s climate future: an initial assessment; citation_publication_date=2009; citation_pages=35-38; citation_id=CR13; citation_author=JJ Daigle; citation_author=D Putnam; citation_publisher=University of Maine
citation_journal_title=Journal of Forestry; citation_title=Does new large private landownership and their management priorities influence public access in the northern forest?; citation_author=JJ Daigle, L Utley, L Chase, W Kuentzel, T Brown; citation_volume=110; citation_issue=2; citation_publication_date=2012; citation_pages=89-96; citation_doi=10.5849/jof.10-091; citation_id=CR14
citation_journal_title=Human Ecology; citation_title=Adaptive learning networks: Developing resource management knowledge through social learning forums; citation_author=IJ Davidson-Hunt; citation_volume=34; citation_issue=4; citation_publication_date=2006; citation_pages=593-614; citation_doi=10.1007/s10745-006-9009-1; citation_id=CR15
citation_journal_title=Conservation Ecology; citation_title=Learning as you journey: Anishinaabe perception of social-ecological environments and adaptive learning; citation_author=I Davidson-Hunt, F Berkes; citation_volume=8; citation_issue=1; citation_publication_date=2003; citation_pages=5; citation_doi=10.5751/ES-00587-080105; citation_id=CR16
citation_journal_title=Science; citation_title=The struggle to govern the common; citation_author=T Dietz, E Ostrom, PC Stern; citation_volume=302; citation_issue=5652; citation_publication_date=2003; citation_pages=1907-1912; citation_doi=10.1126/science.1091015; citation_id=CR17
Endter-Wada, J. (1998). A framework for understanding social science contributions to ecosystem management. Ecological Applications: 891–904.
citation_journal_title=Polar Record; citation_title=Inuit adaptability to changing environmental conditions over an 11-year period in Ulukhaktok, Northwest Territories; citation_author=D Fawcett, T Pearce, R Notaina, JD Ford, P Collings; citation_volume=54; citation_issue=275; citation_publication_date=2018; citation_pages=119-132; citation_doi=10.1017/S003224741800027X; citation_id=CR19
Fox, C. A., Reo, N. J., Turner, D. A., Cook, J., Ditruri, F., Fessell, B., Junkins, J., Johnson, A., Rakena, T. A., Riley, C., Turner, W. J., Williams, J., and Wilson, M. (2016). "The river is us; the river is in our veins": redefining river restoration in three Indigenous communities. Sustainability Science 11(3).
citation_journal_title=Society and Natural Resources; citation_title=Access to natural resources on private property: Factors beyond right of entry; citation_author=C Ginger, M Emery, M Baumflek, D Putnam; citation_volume=25; citation_publication_date=2012; citation_pages=700-715; citation_doi=10.1080/08941920.2011.633596; citation_id=CR21
citation_journal_title=Climatic Change; citation_title=Culture, law, risk and governance: the ecology of traditional knowledge in climate change adaptation; citation_author=P Hardison, T Williams; citation_volume=120; citation_publication_date=2013; citation_pages=531-544; citation_doi=10.1007/s10584-013-0850-0; citation_id=CR22
citation_journal_title=Ecological Processes; citation_title=Indian time: time, seasonality, and culture in Traditional Ecological Knowledge of climate change; citation_author=SC Hatfield, E Marino, KP Whyte, KD Dello, PW Mote; citation_volume=7; citation_issue=1; citation_publication_date=2018; citation_pages=7-25; citation_doi=10.1186/s13717-018-0118-8; citation_id=CR23
Houde N. (2007). The six faces of traditional ecological knowledge: Challenges and opportunities for Canadian co-management arrangements. Ecology and Society, On-line URL:
http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol2/iss2/art34/
.
citation_title=Potential consequences of climate variability and change for native peoples and their homelands; citation_inbook_title=Climate Change Impacts in the United States; citation_publication_date=2001; citation_pages=351-376; citation_id=CR25; citation_author=S Houser; citation_author=V Teller; citation_author=M MacCracken; citation_author=R Gough; citation_author=P Spears; citation_publisher=Cambridge University Press
citation_journal_title=Minding Nature; citation_title=Returning the gift; citation_author=R Kimmerer; citation_volume=7; citation_issue=2; citation_publication_date=2014; citation_pages=18-24; citation_id=CR26
citation_journal_title=Climatic Change; citation_title=The impacts of climate change on tribal traditional foods; citation_author=K Lynn, J Daigle, J Hoffman, F Lake, N Michelle, D Ranco, C Viles, G Voggesser, P Williams; citation_volume=120; citation_publication_date=2013; citation_pages=545-556; citation_doi=10.1007/s10584-013-0736-1; citation_id=CR27
citation_journal_title=Society and Natural Resources; citation_title=Community resilience: An indicator of social sustainability; citation_author=K Magis; citation_volume=23; citation_issue=5; citation_publication_date=2010; citation_pages=401-416; citation_doi=10.1080/08941920903305674; citation_id=CR28
citation_title=Designing Qualitative Research; citation_publication_date=1999; citation_id=CR29; citation_author=CM Marshall; citation_author=GB Rossman; citation_publisher=Sage
Nakashima, D. J., Galloway, M. L. K., Thulstrup, H. D., Ramos, C. A., and Rubis, J. T. (2012). Weathering uncertainty: traditional knowledge for climate change assessment and adaptation. Paris: UNESCO, and Darwin: UNU.: 120p.
citation_journal_title=Human Ecology; citation_title=Transmission of environmental knowledge and land skills among Inuit men in Ulukhaktok, Northwest Territories, Canada; citation_author=T Pearce, H Wright, R Notaina, A Kudlak, B Smit, JD Ford, C Furgal; citation_volume=39; citation_publication_date=2011; citation_pages=271-288; citation_doi=10.1007/s10745-011-9403-1; citation_id=CR31
citation_journal_title=Ecology and Society; citation_title=Sustainability transformations: a resilience perspective; citation_author=P Olsson, V Galaz, WJ Boonstra; citation_volume=19; citation_issue=4; citation_publication_date=2014; citation_pages=1; citation_doi=10.5751/ES-06799-190401; citation_id=CR32
citation_journal_title=Wicazo Sa Review; citation_title=Toward a Native Anthropology: Hermeneutics, Hunting Stories, and Theorizing from Within; citation_author=D Ranco; citation_volume=21; citation_issue=2; citation_publication_date=2006; citation_pages=61-78; citation_doi=10.1353/wic.2006.0022; citation_id=CR33
citation_journal_title=Climatic Change; citation_title=Re-thinking colonialism to prepare for the impacts of rapid environmental change; citation_author=NJ Reo, AK Parker; citation_volume=120; citation_issue=3; citation_publication_date=2013; citation_pages=163-174; citation_doi=10.1007/s10584-013-0783-7; citation_id=CR34
citation_journal_title=Polar Record; citation_title=Contributions of traditional knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic; citation_author=D Riedlinger, F Berkes; citation_volume=37; citation_publication_date=2001; citation_pages=315-328; citation_doi=10.1017/S0032247400017058; citation_id=CR35
citation_journal_title=Human Ecology; citation_title=The influence of context on deliberation and cooperation in community-based forest management in Ontario, Canada; citation_author=M Robson, S Kant; citation_volume=37; citation_publication_date=2009; citation_pages=547-558; citation_doi=10.1007/s10745-009-9251-4; citation_id=CR36
citation_journal_title=Geographical Review; citation_title=Our home is drowning: Inupiat storytelling and climate change in Point Hope, Alaska; citation_author=C Sakakibara; citation_volume=98; citation_issue=4; citation_publication_date=2008; citation_pages=456-475; citation_doi=10.1111/j.1931-0846.2008.tb00312.x; citation_id=CR37
citation_journal_title=American Journal of Public Health; citation_title=Adapting western research methods to Indigenous ways of knowing; citation_author=V Simonds, S Christopher; citation_volume=103; citation_issue=12; citation_publication_date=2013; citation_pages=2185-2192; citation_doi=10.2105/AJPH.2012.301157; citation_id=CR38
citation_title=Penobscot Man; citation_publication_date=1940; citation_id=CR39; citation_author=F Speck; citation_publisher=University of Maine Press
Stevenson, M. G. (1996). Indigenous knowledge in environmental assessment. Artic: 278–291.
citation_journal_title=Environmental Evidence; citation_title=Rethinking communication: integrating storytelling for increased stakeholder engagement in environmental evidence synthesis; citation_author=A Sundin, K Andersson, R Watt; citation_volume=7; citation_publication_date=2018; citation_pages=6; citation_doi=10.1186/s13750-018-0116-4; citation_id=CR41
Swinomish Indian Tribal Community (Swinomish). (2010). Swinomish climate change initiative: climate adaptation action plan. La Conner, WA: Swinomish Indian Tribal Community.
http://www.swinomish-nsn.gov/climate_change/climate_main.html
Te Aho, L. (2009). Negotiating co-management of the Waikato River. Resource Management Journal: 14–18.
citation_journal_title=Global Environmental Change; citation_title=“It’s so different today”: climate change and indigenous lifeways in British Columbia, Canada; citation_author=AG Turner, H Clifton; citation_volume=19; citation_issue=2; citation_publication_date=2009; citation_pages=180-190; citation_doi=10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2009.01.005; citation_id=CR44
citation_journal_title=Climatic Change; citation_title=Cultural impacts to tribes from climate change influences on forests; citation_author=G Voggesser, K Lynn, J Daigle, F Lake, D Ranco; citation_volume=120; citation_publication_date=2013; citation_pages=615-626; citation_doi=10.1007/s10584-013-0733-4; citation_id=CR45
citation_journal_title=Climatic Change; citation_title=Justice forward: tribes, climate adaptation and responsibility in Indian country; citation_author=KP Whyte; citation_volume=120; citation_publication_date=2013; citation_pages=517-530; citation_doi=10.1007/s10584-013-0743-2; citation_id=CR46
citation_title=Red alert: saving the planet with Indigenous knowledge; citation_publication_date=2009; citation_id=CR47; citation_author=D Wildcat; citation_publisher=Fulcrum Publishing