传统生态知识与环境政策的融合促进环境正义

Challenges Pub Date : 2023-01-11 DOI:10.3390/challe14010006
Jennifer B. Rasmussen
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引用次数: 1

摘要

由于气候变化,我们的星球面临着更加频繁和严重的环境威胁(包括对生物多样性的威胁),环境正义对于确保全球所有人公平和公平地分担应对这些威胁的成本和负担至关重要。然而,如果过去是一个指标,环境问题及其“解决方案”不成比例地影响到贫穷社区和有色人种社区,包括土著社区。尽管有这些过去的不公正,土著土地只占地球领土的20%,却拥有世界上剩余生物多样性的80%——这证明土著人民是最有效的环境管理者之一。这一显著数据的主要原因是土著传统生态知识的使用和实践;代代相传的生态智慧,已被证明可以增强社区应对全球环境变化多重压力源的复原力。虽然美国政府在承认传统生态知识的价值方面进展缓慢,但它最近开始将这些知识纳入环境政策,以应对全球气候危机。继续将传统生态知识纳入政府环境政策,将确保这些政策在联邦、州和地方各级更加有效,并在实施中更加公平。西方科学家、政府官员和全球领导人需要通过积极倾听所有文化和尊重保护自然世界和所有生物所需的多种知识体系,与土著社区建立信任和平等的关系。本文将讨论如何将传统生态知识纳入美国的政策,以帮助保护环境免受进一步的生物多样性丧失和其他生态破坏,并促进环境正义,以确保公平对待所有人。
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Advancing Environmental Justice through the Integration of Traditional Ecological Knowledge into Environmental Policy
As our planet faces more frequent and severe environmental threats due to climate change (including threats to biodiversity), environmental justice will be essential to ensure that the costs and burdens of combating these threats are shared equally, borne by all people worldwide in a fair and equitable manner. If the past is any indicator, however, environmental problems—and their “solutions”—disproportionately affect poor communities and communities of color, including Indigenous communities. Despite these past injustices, Indigenous lands, which make up only 20 percent of the Earth’s territory, contain 80 percent of the world’s remaining biodiversity—evidence that Indigenous peoples are among the most effective stewards of the environment. A primary reason for this remarkable statistic is the use and practice of Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge; ecological wisdom which has been passed down for generations and has been shown to strengthen community resilience in response to the multiple stressors of global environmental change. While the United States government has been slow to acknowledge the value of Traditional Ecological Knowledge, it has recently begun to incorporate that knowledge into environmental policy in response to the worldwide climate crisis. Continuing the integration of Traditional Ecological Knowledge into government environmental policy will ensure that such policies will be more effective at the federal, state, and local levels and more equitable in their application. Western scientists, government officials, and global leaders need to build trusting and co-equal relationships with Indigenous communities by actively listening to all cultures and respecting the many kinds of knowledge systems required to conserve the natural world and all living beings. This paper will address how incorporating Traditional Ecological Knowledge into U.S. policy would help safeguard the environment from further biodiversity loss and other ecological destruction, and advance environmental justice to ensure the fair treatment of all.
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