Indigenous peoples in the Arctic have historically experienced a broad range of demographic and ecological adversities, the impacts of which sometimes included high mortalities and population dislocations. The anthropological literature has tended to emphasise the dramatic, negative impacts of such events on human groups—to an extent that implies the fabric of social life was typically devastated. This study takes a markedly different perspective by instead describing the resilience of Indigenous populations in the face of culturally traumatic events; in this case, a series of epidemic diseases and major declines in a very critical subsistence resource. Drawing on a rich collection of data documenting Indigenous land use and settlement patt...
ABSTRACT. The peoples in the arctic regions have experienced unprecedented cultural change in the la...
Research is steadily progressing on human responses to natural changes such as climate change, both ...
Human-environment interactions can affect the sex ratios of resource-dependent societies in a variet...
I explored one aspect of social-ecological change in the context of an Alaskan human-Rangifer system...
Amid the surge in research on mobility and migration in the context of environmental change, little ...
This special issue of Cross-Cultural Research presents four papers each of which in their own way ad...
The arctic system is undergoing significant change, warming at twice the rate of the rest of the wor...
The late polar exploration period—spanning from the 1890s to the 1930s—was categorised as European p...
Following an introduction on the place of the anthropologist in the study of Eskimo archeology and c...
This paper examines the history of the Yup'ik Eskimos of western Alaska and explores how their ...
Research on the human dimensions of global climate change should consider the way at‐risk population...
This paper describes a household survey of Inuit in northern Alaska and how the survey data were use...
The Iñupiat communities of Point Barrow, Alaska can trace their lineage back to some of the earliest...
Human adaptation remains an insufficiently studied part of the subject of climate change. This paper...
Like many other Alaska Native communities, the Yup’ik people of Quinhagak follow a subsistence lifes...
ABSTRACT. The peoples in the arctic regions have experienced unprecedented cultural change in the la...
Research is steadily progressing on human responses to natural changes such as climate change, both ...
Human-environment interactions can affect the sex ratios of resource-dependent societies in a variet...
I explored one aspect of social-ecological change in the context of an Alaskan human-Rangifer system...
Amid the surge in research on mobility and migration in the context of environmental change, little ...
This special issue of Cross-Cultural Research presents four papers each of which in their own way ad...
The arctic system is undergoing significant change, warming at twice the rate of the rest of the wor...
The late polar exploration period—spanning from the 1890s to the 1930s—was categorised as European p...
Following an introduction on the place of the anthropologist in the study of Eskimo archeology and c...
This paper examines the history of the Yup'ik Eskimos of western Alaska and explores how their ...
Research on the human dimensions of global climate change should consider the way at‐risk population...
This paper describes a household survey of Inuit in northern Alaska and how the survey data were use...
The Iñupiat communities of Point Barrow, Alaska can trace their lineage back to some of the earliest...
Human adaptation remains an insufficiently studied part of the subject of climate change. This paper...
Like many other Alaska Native communities, the Yup’ik people of Quinhagak follow a subsistence lifes...
ABSTRACT. The peoples in the arctic regions have experienced unprecedented cultural change in the la...
Research is steadily progressing on human responses to natural changes such as climate change, both ...
Human-environment interactions can affect the sex ratios of resource-dependent societies in a variet...