2011
DOI: 10.1007/s10745-011-9420-0
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The Role of Habitus in the Maintenance of Traditional Noongar Plant Knowledge in Southwest Western Australia

Abstract: We examine the role that habitus, an individual's or group's dispositions, has played in the retention of traditional ecological knowledge among the Noongar people of south-western Australia. We sought to determine if current plant knowledge reflects Noongar habitus or, alternatively, the use of fall-back species that were important due to the intermittency of agricultural employment and the social exclusion of Aboriginal people up until at least the 1960s in Western Australia. We compared the seasonal availab… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…However, HNC counteracts such bias as it allows for social or cultural practices that may be motivated primarily by cultural identity and habitus (cf. Rusack 2011). Some societies may see plants and animals not as resources to be managed (in the contemporary, "western" sense) but as entities to be protected or propagated to satisfy ritual or mythological obligations and traditions (Keen 2004).…”
Section: Human Niche Constructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, HNC counteracts such bias as it allows for social or cultural practices that may be motivated primarily by cultural identity and habitus (cf. Rusack 2011). Some societies may see plants and animals not as resources to be managed (in the contemporary, "western" sense) but as entities to be protected or propagated to satisfy ritual or mythological obligations and traditions (Keen 2004).…”
Section: Human Niche Constructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, search time is negligible and daily variance in return rates is much lower than for hunted or fished resources (Greaves 1997b;Tucker 2006). Some groups rely on the predictability of wild roots as fallback foods in response to downturns in the availability of protein and fat resources (Hildebrand 2003;Malaisse and Parent 1985;Rusak et al 2011).…”
Section: Root Foodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Non-metric multidimensional scaling can also be used to examine linear and non-linear associations between patterns of recovery and measures of adaptive capacity across multiple time intervals, illustrating the complex dynamics of change. Although ecologists typically use NMDS to understand the species composition of ecological communities, social scientists have applied similar dimension-reduction techniques to understand other complex social phenomenon, akin to "mapping" the ecology of social dynamics in which no single indicator is likely to be sufficient (Crona and Bodin 2006, Rusack et al 2011, Paolisso et al 2012, Reyes-Garcia et al 2013, Lansing et al 2014, Hruschka et al 2017.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%