"What sets worlds in motion is the interplay of differences, their attractions and repulsions. Life is plurality, death is uniformity. By suppressing differences and peculiarities, by eliminating different civilisations and cultures, progress weakens life and favours death. The ideal of a single civilisation for everyone implicit in the cult of progress and technique, impoverishes and mutilates us. Every view of the world that becomes extinct, every culture that disappears, diminishes a possibility of life!
Worldwide challenges to health reflect a paradox of success, whereby both the strengths and the we...
Health trends over much of the past century have been generally, and notably, positive throughout th...
This paper uses the concepts of ethnosphere and ethnodiversity to frame the stakes of cultural genoc...
“What sets worlds in motion is the interplay of diff erences, their attractions and repulsions. Life...
Since the mid-Seventies there has been a massive increase in the activities of indigenous minorities...
Global challenges (e.g., hegemonic globalization, demographic shifts, poverty/famine, conflicts and ...
The 400 million indigenous people worldwide represent a wealth of linguistic and cultural diversity,...
The 400 million indigenous people worldwide represent a wealth of linguistic and cultural diversity,...
In historical terms, inter-civilizational contacts inevitably created a notion of otherness between ...
Modern civilization is inherently unsustainable, and is thus implicated in the progressive annihilat...
The human condition today is marked by paradox and contradiction. This situation reflects not just i...
On both sides of the Tasman Sea in the nineteenth century, many settlers believed the indigenous peo...
Death is a theme of central importance in all cultures, but the manner in which it is interpreted va...
By understanding a community’s medical system, we are able to see its body ontology and how the peop...
The human impact on life on Earth has increased sharply since the 1970s, driven by the demands of a ...
Worldwide challenges to health reflect a paradox of success, whereby both the strengths and the we...
Health trends over much of the past century have been generally, and notably, positive throughout th...
This paper uses the concepts of ethnosphere and ethnodiversity to frame the stakes of cultural genoc...
“What sets worlds in motion is the interplay of diff erences, their attractions and repulsions. Life...
Since the mid-Seventies there has been a massive increase in the activities of indigenous minorities...
Global challenges (e.g., hegemonic globalization, demographic shifts, poverty/famine, conflicts and ...
The 400 million indigenous people worldwide represent a wealth of linguistic and cultural diversity,...
The 400 million indigenous people worldwide represent a wealth of linguistic and cultural diversity,...
In historical terms, inter-civilizational contacts inevitably created a notion of otherness between ...
Modern civilization is inherently unsustainable, and is thus implicated in the progressive annihilat...
The human condition today is marked by paradox and contradiction. This situation reflects not just i...
On both sides of the Tasman Sea in the nineteenth century, many settlers believed the indigenous peo...
Death is a theme of central importance in all cultures, but the manner in which it is interpreted va...
By understanding a community’s medical system, we are able to see its body ontology and how the peop...
The human impact on life on Earth has increased sharply since the 1970s, driven by the demands of a ...
Worldwide challenges to health reflect a paradox of success, whereby both the strengths and the we...
Health trends over much of the past century have been generally, and notably, positive throughout th...
This paper uses the concepts of ethnosphere and ethnodiversity to frame the stakes of cultural genoc...