As the United States and Australia struggle with contemporary crises over competing uses of rapidly depleting natural resources, there are striking parallels between American Indian and Australian Aboriginal communities demanding a place at the management table and offering culturally based understandings of and solutions for the ecosystems at risk. These efforts to integrate indigenous knowledge into mainstream natural resource management are part of larger legal and political debates over land tenure, the locus of control, indigenous self-governance, and holistic ecosystems management
Indigenous co-management of lands, waters, seas and resources is rapidly expanding throughout the wo...
Aboriginal participation in water resources decision making in Australia is similar when compared wi...
Recent movements within sustainability have sought to integrate Indigenous relationships to natural ...
As the U.S. and Australia struggle with contemporary crises over competing uses of rapidly depleting...
This paper synthesises the lessons learnt and challenges encountered when applying Indigenous and no...
This chapter interrogates the complex issue of securing meaningful Indigenous participation in natur...
This chapter interrogates the complex issue of securing meaningful Indigenous participation in natur...
Involving Indigenous peoples and traditional knowledge in natural resource management produces more ...
In Australia national concerns about climate change, biodiversity loss, water quantity and quality a...
In this article we examine the concept of ‘indigenous knowledge’ as it is currently used in resource...
Despite an increasing interest among land managers in collaborative management and learning from pla...
In this article we examine the concept of ‘indigenous knowledge’ as it is currently used in resource...
Over the last few decades Aboriginal land management (ALM) has received increased interest and inves...
The beliefs and practices of indigenous groups are increasingly recognized as being of value for res...
Aboriginal inhabitants of the Wet Tropics of Queensland advocate for greater inclusion of their Indi...
Indigenous co-management of lands, waters, seas and resources is rapidly expanding throughout the wo...
Aboriginal participation in water resources decision making in Australia is similar when compared wi...
Recent movements within sustainability have sought to integrate Indigenous relationships to natural ...
As the U.S. and Australia struggle with contemporary crises over competing uses of rapidly depleting...
This paper synthesises the lessons learnt and challenges encountered when applying Indigenous and no...
This chapter interrogates the complex issue of securing meaningful Indigenous participation in natur...
This chapter interrogates the complex issue of securing meaningful Indigenous participation in natur...
Involving Indigenous peoples and traditional knowledge in natural resource management produces more ...
In Australia national concerns about climate change, biodiversity loss, water quantity and quality a...
In this article we examine the concept of ‘indigenous knowledge’ as it is currently used in resource...
Despite an increasing interest among land managers in collaborative management and learning from pla...
In this article we examine the concept of ‘indigenous knowledge’ as it is currently used in resource...
Over the last few decades Aboriginal land management (ALM) has received increased interest and inves...
The beliefs and practices of indigenous groups are increasingly recognized as being of value for res...
Aboriginal inhabitants of the Wet Tropics of Queensland advocate for greater inclusion of their Indi...
Indigenous co-management of lands, waters, seas and resources is rapidly expanding throughout the wo...
Aboriginal participation in water resources decision making in Australia is similar when compared wi...
Recent movements within sustainability have sought to integrate Indigenous relationships to natural ...