This contribution addresses key issues around the application of Indigenous knowledge in contexts where such knowledge is neither generated nor held (academy, industry, governments, etc.). Effective models for the ethical incorporation of Indigenous knowledge into environmental governance in Canada have remained elusive despite decades of attempts. The predominant research paradigm of “incorporating” Indigenous knowledge into environmental governance is one of extraction by the external interests who seek to include specific aspects of such knowledge in their undertakings. This approach continues to fail because Indigenous knowledge exists as an integral component of Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS). It is often hollow and potentially dam...
This thesis examines the incorporation of traditional ecological knowledge or “TEK” (sometimes known...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
Many Indigenous communities living on traditional lands have not contributed significantly to harmfu...
This contribution addresses key issues around the application of Indigenous knowledge in contexts wh...
The importance of Indigenous knowledge systems for environmental decision-making is now widely recog...
ABSTRACT. In Canada’s Northwest Territories, governments, industrial corporations, and other organiz...
A steady shift in the environmental management literature encourages greater inclusion of traditiona...
ABSTRACT. Increasingly, federal environmental guidelines require developers to consider the “traditi...
Indigenous peoples around the world are concerned about the long-term impacts of industrial activiti...
This volume provides an overview of key themes in Indigenous Environmental Knowledge (IEK) and ancho...
Abstract Human activities and development have contributed to declines in biodiversity across the gl...
In this study an attempt is made to show how the historical exclusion of Indigenous knowledge (IK) f...
This thesis examines the incorporation of Indigenous Local Knowledge (ILK) in the environmental gove...
This special issue of AlterNative explores the theme of Indigenous knowledges impacting the environm...
Indigenous peoples now engage with many decentralized approaches to environmental management that of...
This thesis examines the incorporation of traditional ecological knowledge or “TEK” (sometimes known...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
Many Indigenous communities living on traditional lands have not contributed significantly to harmfu...
This contribution addresses key issues around the application of Indigenous knowledge in contexts wh...
The importance of Indigenous knowledge systems for environmental decision-making is now widely recog...
ABSTRACT. In Canada’s Northwest Territories, governments, industrial corporations, and other organiz...
A steady shift in the environmental management literature encourages greater inclusion of traditiona...
ABSTRACT. Increasingly, federal environmental guidelines require developers to consider the “traditi...
Indigenous peoples around the world are concerned about the long-term impacts of industrial activiti...
This volume provides an overview of key themes in Indigenous Environmental Knowledge (IEK) and ancho...
Abstract Human activities and development have contributed to declines in biodiversity across the gl...
In this study an attempt is made to show how the historical exclusion of Indigenous knowledge (IK) f...
This thesis examines the incorporation of Indigenous Local Knowledge (ILK) in the environmental gove...
This special issue of AlterNative explores the theme of Indigenous knowledges impacting the environm...
Indigenous peoples now engage with many decentralized approaches to environmental management that of...
This thesis examines the incorporation of traditional ecological knowledge or “TEK” (sometimes known...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
Many Indigenous communities living on traditional lands have not contributed significantly to harmfu...