1st Edition

Indigenous Knowledges and the Sustainable Development Agenda

Edited By Anders Breidlid, Roy Krøvel Copyright 2020
250 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

250 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book discusses the vital importance of including indigenous knowledges in the sustainable development agenda. In the wake of colonialism and imperialism, dialogue between indigenous knowledges and Western epistemology has broken down time and again. However, in recent decades the broader indigenous struggle for rights and recognition has led to a better understanding of indigenous... Read more

Introduction
Anders Breidlid and Roy Krøvel

  1. Beyond the Western paradigm: Indigenization of education systems, the sustainable development goals and state building in Sub-Saharan Africa
  2. Anders Breidlid

  3. Indigenous knowledges, education and media in Australia
  4. Lisa Waller

  5. Forest rights act, local collectivization and transformation in Korchi
  6. Neema Pathak Broome, Shrishtee Bajpai and Mukesh Shende

  7. Food System transition in India: A Political Ecology analysis
  8. Vandana

  9. The political ecology of the Tabasará river basin
  10. Ginés A Sánchez Arias

  11. Indigenous ecological knowledge in the Colombian Amazon – challenges and prospects for a more sustainable use of local forest fauna
  12. Torsten Krause, Maria Paula Quiceno Mesa and Uldarico Matapí Yucuna

  13. A dialogue of knowledges What can we bring home from the plurivers?
  14. Roy Krøvel

  15. Indigenous good sense on climate change
  16. Andreas Ytterstad

  17. Indigenous knowledges and academic understandings of pastoral mobility
  18. Hanne Kirstine Adriansen

  19. Struggling with ‘Clear Zoning’: Dilemmas of Carnivore-Pastoral Coexistence in Nordland, northern Norway
  20. Camilla Risvoll and Randi Kaarhus

  21. Through our stories we continue to resist: decolonial perspective on south Saami history, indigeneity and rights

          Eva Maria Fjellheim

 

Biography

Anders Breidlid is Professor of International Education and Development, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway.

Roy Krøvel is Professor of Journalism, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway.

Editors Breidlid and Krøvel (both, Oslo Metropolitan Univ.) bring together diverse authors from within and outside academia in this collection. Taking the UN Sustainable Development Goals as its entry point, the book argues that, for the goals to be successful, Western ideas of sustainability and development need to be expanded to more fully include insights and perspectives from indigenous peoples and knowledge systems. Drawing on studies and experiences of indigenous people and sustainability from Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, and Latin America, the individual chapters offer examples of collaborative research with indigenous knowledge holders, indigenous resistance to forces of ongoing colonization and displacement, and indigenous approaches to governance and ecological systems. As the editors convey, Western scholars are the book's principal intended audience, with the hope that it can encourage more authentic engagement with indigenous peoples and knowledges. With this framing, this volume will be of most interest to those focusing on indigenous knowledge, decolonization, political ecology, and development studies.

J. L. Rhoades, Antioch University, New England, USA

This book offers an important and contemporary contribution across disciplines aligned to Social Work. [...] Drawing on alternative global practices to tackle social exclusion and inequalities, especially from a decolonized perspective, will provoke social workers to incorporate sustainability to their practice and to think both globally and locally. Thinking this way could potentially inspire less constrained solutions to some of the future challenges the profession of social work faces.

Jill ChildsDepartment of Sport, Health Sciences and Social Work, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK