Litcius/Paper detail

Indigenous ecological knowledge systems – Exploring sensory narratives

Liz Cameron

2022Ecological Management & Restoration28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Summary There is little attention focused on how Indigenous Australian people engage with the environment and how other ecologists can include this interdisciplinary approach into their practice. Despite many ecologists' genuine desire to work across cultural fields together, there are some notable differences between Western and Indigenous ideologies. One of these principles involves an embodied process that allows us as Indigenous people to connect, analyse, predict and measure changes in Country. This cultural tool of knowing is bounded in place‐based narratives that are sensory‐driven to filter and guide our field experiences. This article serves as an essential resource for scientists and conservationists to rethink their connections to place through immersive bodily experiences as a meaningful apparatus to increase public environmental stewardship. After all, is it not our desire to inspire ecological thinking within a public domain?

Topics & Concepts

IndigenousStewardship (theology)NarrativeEmbodied cognitionEnvironmental ethicsSociologyResource (disambiguation)IdeologyTraditional knowledgeEcologyField (mathematics)EpistemologyPolitical scienceComputer scienceBiologyPure mathematicsMathematicsPoliticsComputer networkLawPhilosophyLinguisticsIndigenous Studies and EcologyAnimal and Plant Science EducationGeographies of human-animal interactions