2022
DOI: 10.1002/pan3.10321
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Well grounded: Indigenous Peoples' knowledge, ethnobiology and sustainability

Abstract: The biological knowledge and associated values and beliefs of Indigenous and other long‐resident Peoples are often overlooked and underrepresented in governance, planning and decision‐making at local, regional, national and international levels. Ethnobiology—the study of the dynamic relationships among peoples, biota and environments—is a field that places Indigenous Peoples' ecological knowledge and ways of knowing at the forefront of research interests, particularly in relation to the importance of biocultur… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…People and Nature was launched not only as a broad scope and interdisciplinary journal, but also as a journal of relational thinking. Relational thinking is of course not new: it has been central to many Indigenous ways of knowing since time immemorial and is arguably central to fields like ethnobiology (Todd, 2014; Turner et al, 2022). How, then, are People and Nature researchers assembling around this way of thinking, and what (if anything) might our concern with the relational dimensions of ‘people’ and ‘nature’ invite, or indeed require, us to do differently?…”
Section: Towards Relational Thinkingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People and Nature was launched not only as a broad scope and interdisciplinary journal, but also as a journal of relational thinking. Relational thinking is of course not new: it has been central to many Indigenous ways of knowing since time immemorial and is arguably central to fields like ethnobiology (Todd, 2014; Turner et al, 2022). How, then, are People and Nature researchers assembling around this way of thinking, and what (if anything) might our concern with the relational dimensions of ‘people’ and ‘nature’ invite, or indeed require, us to do differently?…”
Section: Towards Relational Thinkingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Native peoples are responsible for everything from environmental monitoring and building relationships with plants and lands to ecological restoration (Wehi and Lord 2017;Thompson et al, 2020). In this sense, there are many lessons and ways in which the intersections between indigenous knowledge and ethnobiology can inform and contribute to the future of humanity and other lives on Earth (Turner et al, 2022).…”
Section: Delimitation Of Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In some studies, indigenous peoples were responsible for environmental monitoring, building relationships with plants and lands, and even ecological restoration (Thompson et al, 2020;Wehi and Lord, 2017). In this sense, there are many lessons and ways in which the intersections between indigenous knowledge and ethnobiology can inform and contribute to the future of humanity and other lives on Earth (Turner et al, 2022).…”
Section: Environmental Dimensionmentioning
confidence: 99%