|

‘We Belong to the Land’: Survival and Restoration Under Northern Climate Change

Tero Mustonen Snowchange The current planetary shifts and species redistribution require us to rethink nature conservation, both from the viewpoint of forming novel ecosystems and in relation to issues of historical equity. In particular, this reorientation needs to establish remedies for the historical errors of mainstream societies that promoted nature conservation for their own benefit,…

|

The Traditional medicine knowledge and medicinal plant species move in response to Climate Change Adaptation in Tibetan village of Eastern Himalayas, China

Prof Lun Yin1, Mr. Misiani Zachary2, M. Yanyan Zheng3 1Yunnan Academy Of Social Science, Kunming, China, 2Kenya Meteorological Department, Ministry of Environment and Forestry, Nairobi, Kenya, 3Yunnan People’s Publishing House, Kunming, China Traditional medicine provides health care for more than half of the World’s population. This makes indigenous cultures vulnerable to environmental change due to…

|

Doing species together. Saliba indigenous people and researchers in a mixed and complex method.

Dr Santiago Martínez Medina1, Mscs Talía Waldrón1, Msc Emmerson Pastás1 1Alexander von Humboldt Institute, Bogota , Colombia The following intervention presents the results of the joint effort between the communities of the Saliba indigenous people of Orocue, Casanare, with the Alexander von Humboldt Institute. In the year 2017, the community contacted the Institute seeking collaboration…

|

Conservation planning with Indigenous Communities: Bridging Two Ways of Knowing for a Shared Future

Dr Kimberly Heinemeyer1, Dr. Maggie Triska1, Ms Julia O’Keefe1, Mr. Dennis Sizemore1 1Round River Conservation Studies, Bozeman, United States Indigenous-led land planning provide unprecedented opportunities to include indigenous knowledge (IK) to understand ecological and cultural values across landscapes. The deep, long temporal breadth of knowledge as well as the enduring stewardship commitment of indigenous people…

|

Are reindeer the new canaries? – How extractive industries facilitate multiple pressures on an Arctic pastoral ecosystem.

Christian Fohringer1, Gunhild Rosqvist2, Göran Ericsson1, Niila Inga3, Navinder J Singh1 1Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umeå SE-90183 Sweden 2Department of Physical Geography and Quaternary Geology, Stockholm University, Stockholm SE-106 91, Sweden 3National Union of the Swedish Saami People / Sámiid Riikkasearvi (SSR), Umeå SE-906 21 Sweden  …

|

The power of the Sumak kawsay (buen vivir) ancestral philosophy in the indigenous movements of Colombia – Ecuador vs exclusion by mining mega- development, contributions to the rights of the nature from the global south

Mr Eduardo Erazo Acosta1 1University of Nariño, Pasto, Colombia This research has been carried out in the last 7 years, with emphasis on the republics of Colombia, Ecuador, in the Indigenous Communities of Colombia CRIC, Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca and CONAIE Confederation indigenous of Ecuador, in comparative perspective. In addition to the Ecuadorian indigenous…

|

Analysis and Management of Tibetan Antelope Migration Route Based on Habitat Suitability Index Model

Prof. Rencai Dong1, Ph.D candidate Xueqi  Zhang1,2, Prof. Guohua Liu1 1Research Centre For Eco-environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy Of Sciences  State Key Laboratory Of Urban And Regional , Beijing, China, 2University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China To protect migration routes is very important for scientific management of endangered species. The Tibetan antelope (Pantholops hodgsonii),…