PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH
; TORRES STRAIT
; COMMUNITIES
; AGENCY
; GOVERNANCE
; POWER
; HUMOR
WOS学科分类:
Environmental Sciences
; Environmental Studies
WOS研究方向:
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
英文摘要:
This paper explores how Australia's Indigenous peoples understand and respond to climate change impacts on their traditional land and seas. Our results show that: (i) Indigenous peoples are observing modifications to their country due to climate change, and are doing so in both ancient and colonial time scales; (ii) the ways that climate change terminology is discursively understood and used is fundamental to achieving deep engagement and effective adaptive governance; (iii) Indigenous peoples in Australia exhibit a high level of agency via diverse approaches to climate adaptation; and (iv) humour is perceived as an important cultural component of engagement about climate change and adaptation. However, wider governance regimes consistently attempt to "upscale" Indigenous initiatives into their own culturally governed frameworks - or ignore them totally as they "don't fit" within neoliberal policy regimes. We argue that an opportunity exists to acknowledge the ways in which Indigenous peoples are agents of their own change, and to support the strategic localism of Indigenous adaptation approaches through tailored and place-based adaptation for traditional country.
1.Univ Adelaide, Dept Geog, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia 2.Univ Adelaide, Dept Media, Adelaide, SA, Australia 3.Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr, Sippy Downs, Qld, Australia 4.Uppsala Univ, SWEDESD, Uppsala, Sweden 5.Brock Univ, Environm Sustainabil Res Ctr, St Catharines, ON, Canada 6.Girringun Aboriginal Corp, Cardwell, Australia
Recommended Citation:
Nursey-Bray, Melissa,Palmer, R.,Smith, T. F.,et al. Old ways for new days: Australian Indigenous peoples and climate change[J]. LOCAL ENVIRONMENT,2019-01-01,24(5):473-486