本土化修复:城市公园之前的本土土地。

4区 生物学 Q2 Medicine Human Biology Pub Date : 2020-11-17 DOI:10.13110/humanbiology.92.1.02
Jessica Hernandez, Kristiina A Vogt
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引用次数: 3

摘要

气候变化和人类活动继续造成负面的环境影响,改变土地生产力、生态系统健康及其潜在的土地用途。然而,这些环境影响是通过土地恢复框架来解决的,这些框架没有包括关于土地与土著人民之间联系的有力叙述。土地与土著人民之间的这种联系在恢复框架中并不明显,因为这些框架是线性的,它们深深植根于西方科学。在这篇文章中,作者认为,恢复项目必须纳入指标,通过土著镜头重新评估恢复。通过文献综述和他们正在进行的修复项目,他们确定了三个重要的恢复指标:生态殖民主义、亲族中心生态学和环境叙事。他们运用这些指标来提供他们正在进行的场地的历史背景,位于华盛顿州西雅图最大的城市公园探索公园的黎明之星印第安文化中心。他们的结论是,将这三个指标纳入恢复框架不仅可以使恢复本土化,而且可以帮助制定更有效的解决方案,以解决在不健康的生态系统中持续数十年的环境问题。
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Indigenizing Restoration: Indigenous Lands before Urban Parks.

Climate change and human activities continue to result in negative environmental impacts that alter land productivity, ecosystem health, and their potential land uses. However, these environmental impacts are being addressed through land restoration frameworks that do not include the robust narrative on the links between land and Indigenous peoples. This link between land and Indigenous peoples is not visible in restoration frameworks owing to the linearity of these frameworks and their deep roots in Western science. In this article, the authors contend that restoration projects must incorporate indicators that reevaluate restoration through an Indigenous lens. Through a literature review and their ongoing restoration project, they identify three major indicators that are important to incorporate in restoration: ecocolonialism, kincentric ecology, and environmental narratives. They apply these indicators to provide the historical context of their ongoing field site, Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center located at Discovery Park, the largest urban park in Seattle, Washington. They conclude that incorporating these three indicators into restoration frameworks not only indigenizes restoration but also can help create more effective solutions to environmental problems persisting for decades in unhealthy ecosystems.

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来源期刊
Human Biology
Human Biology 生物-生物学
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
88
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Human Biology publishes original scientific articles, brief communications, letters to the editor, and review articles on the general topic of biological anthropology. Our main focus is understanding human biological variation and human evolution through a broad range of approaches. We encourage investigators to submit any study on human biological diversity presented from an evolutionary or adaptive perspective. Priority will be given to interdisciplinary studies that seek to better explain the interaction between cultural processes and biological processes in our evolution. Methodological papers are also encouraged. Any computational approach intended to summarize cultural variation is encouraged. Studies that are essentially descriptive or concern only a limited geographic area are acceptable only when they have a wider relevance to understanding human biological variation. Manuscripts may cover any of the following disciplines, once the anthropological focus is apparent: human population genetics, evolutionary and genetic demography, quantitative genetics, evolutionary biology, ancient DNA studies, biological diversity interpreted in terms of adaptation (biometry, physical anthropology), and interdisciplinary research linking biological and cultural diversity (inferred from linguistic variability, ethnological diversity, archaeological evidence, etc.).
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