Litcius/Paper detail

Indigenous Knowledge Systems

Bianca van Bavel, Joanna Macdonald, Dalee Sambo Dorough

2022Cambridge University Press eBooks30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has begun to acknowledge, albeit slowly, the importance of Indigenous knowledge (IK) systems in contributing to understandings of climate change and effective climate action. Yet Indigenous Peoples (IPs) and IK systems remain largely excluded and marginalised from the IPCC global assessment reports. IPCC scientists and leaders have a unique and specific obligation to IK systems that does not extend to other knowledge systems. IK is the knowledge of rights holders and therefore acknowledging and respecting the self-determination of IPs over their knowledgeincluding how it is used, interpreted and synthesizedis imperative. There are examples of IPs organising themselves in other international spaces that could inform how the IPCC can approach a stronger, more durable engagement with IPs. Perhaps the ultimate challenge for the IPCC is that when bringing IK systems together with other knowledge systems, the framing of evidence must reflect the diversity of these distinct and discrete ways of knowing. Examples from the lived experience of the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) in engaging with the IPCC demonstrate diverse channels for engagement, yet significant limitations persist.

Topics & Concepts

Framing (construction)Traditional knowledgeIndigenousCircumpolar starEnvironmental ethicsClimate scienceObligationPolitical scienceClimate changeSociologyGeographyEcologyLawPhysicsBiologyArchaeologyPhilosophyAstronomyIndigenous Studies and EcologyClimate change and permafrost
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