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Engaging Indigenous perspectives on health, wellbeing and climate change. A new research agenda for holistic climate action in Aotearoa and beyond

Danielle Johnson, Meg Parsons, Karen Fisher

2021Local Environment53 citationsDOI

Abstract

Existing frameworks for interpreting and acting upon the health consequences of climate change fail to engage with the multiple and complex forms of loss and damage that Indigenous peoples experience to their health and wellbeing in a changing climate. Using a case study of Māori in Aotearoa New Zealand, we call for a new research agenda that foregrounds Indigenous peoples’ collective, relational perspectives on health and wellbeing in order to better conceptualise the health implications of climate change. The agenda builds understanding and recognition of intangible loss and damages, bringing multiple knowledge systems and worldviews into conversation to drive adaptation that not only safeguards but also promotes the visions Indigenous peoples have for their health and wellbeing.

Topics & Concepts

AotearoaIndigenousEnvironmental ethicsClimate changeVisionSociologyAction (physics)Climate justiceConversationPolitical scienceGender studiesEcologyAnthropologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsBiologyCommunicationPhilosophyClimate Change and Health ImpactsIndigenous Studies and EcologyHealth, psychology, and well-being
Engaging Indigenous perspectives on health, wellbeing and climate change. A new research agenda for holistic climate action in Aotearoa and beyond | Litcius