2019
DOI: 10.1080/17450101.2019.1611015
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Indigenous mobility traditions, colonialism, and the anthropocene

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Cited by 67 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Strong place attachment and reliance on a narrow resource base and/or a limited availability of culturally important resources can also put communities at constant threat of environmental change and limit the potential for adaptations through relocation or changing livelihoods, 43,44 although in many contexts such limits stem as much from colonially imposed constraints to traditional mobility patterns as they do from environmental change. 45 Although place attachment has the potential to create vulnerability, ''place'' is not static, and new configurations of peopleplace relationships often reflect changing socio-ecological conditions. Place thus remains an enduring feature in many Indigenous cultures.…”
Section: Resilience Factors and Indigenous Peoplesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Strong place attachment and reliance on a narrow resource base and/or a limited availability of culturally important resources can also put communities at constant threat of environmental change and limit the potential for adaptations through relocation or changing livelihoods, 43,44 although in many contexts such limits stem as much from colonially imposed constraints to traditional mobility patterns as they do from environmental change. 45 Although place attachment has the potential to create vulnerability, ''place'' is not static, and new configurations of peopleplace relationships often reflect changing socio-ecological conditions. Place thus remains an enduring feature in many Indigenous cultures.…”
Section: Resilience Factors and Indigenous Peoplesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…63,111 Many of these diverse strategies that underpin resilience can be broadly thought of as ''indigenous mobility traditions.'' 45 Such mobility is often a central component of Indigenous institutions and political systems, integrates community norms and responsibilities, and is predicated upon in-depth knowledge of environmental conditions embodied within IK. The ability to switch food species in hunting societies, for example, depends ll OPEN ACCESS on knowledge of the behavior of different species and how they are harvested and prepared, confidence to travel in different environments, and the ability to synchronize activities in accordance with ecosystem dynamics.…”
Section: Collective Actionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Ajibade (2017) demonstrates in the case of Eko Atlantic city in Nigeria, hierarchizations that define the type of knowledge needed for resilience support elite interests over local knowledge and the values of poor residents. The sampled literature shows this is not a new process and, instead, has deep roots in the settler-colonial project, which establishes norms and legal structures to constrain alternatives (Bell et al, 2019), restrict Indigenous mobility (Whyte et al, 2019), and erode traditional belief systems (Hirons et al, 2018).…”
Section: Hierarchizations In Knowledge-production Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This more comprehensive form of understanding mobility allows us to examine the political role of mobility in terms of Indigenous resistance, ethnic revindication, and territorial dispute [44,45]. We will argue that the translocal mobility of Aymara people in the current urbanized era is also an act of cultural and political self-determination [7].…”
Section: Mobility In Inter-cultural Contexts: Aymara Mobilitymentioning
confidence: 99%