User:Evanalst93/Climate change and indigenous peoples/Bibliography

North America
‘‘It’s so different today’’: Climate change and indigenous lifeways in British Columbia, Canada by Turner and Clifton



Book: Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples in the United States Impacts, Experiences and Actions by Julie Koppel Maldonado Benedict Colombi Rajul Pandya

https://www.rainforest-alliance.org/articles/indigenous-peoples-the-best-forest-guardians


 * Manage a quarter of earth’ surface (20-25%) and care for about 80% of Earth’s biodiversity
 * Know how to best protect forests, need forests to slow climate change
 * “Now is the time to bring together all this knowledge - the knowledge that scientists, scholars, and Indigenous people have”

https://www.un.org/en/events/indigenousday/pdf/Backgrounder_ClimateChange_FINAL.pdf


 * The effects of climate change on indigenous peoples
 * Drawbacks and difficulties of responding to climate change
 * Poses threat to the livelihood of indigenous communities
 * Creative adaptive ways to react to the impacts of climate change

https://www.un.org/development/desa/indigenouspeoples/meetings-and-workshops/expert-group-meeting-on-conservation-and-the-rights-of-indigenous-peoples.html


 * Conservation and rights of Indigenous peoples
 * Play a big role, make up about 5% of global population
 * Occupy and manage 20-25% of earth’s land surface

Framing climate change and indigenous peoples: Intermediaries of urgency, spirituality and de-nationalization by Anna Roosvall, Matthew Tegelberg

Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples: A Synthesis of Current Impacts and Experiences - USDA


 * Tribes in coastal areas of US are vulnerable to sea level rise and land erosion that have the potential to lead to displacement and subsequent relocation. (p 2)
 * Alaska- permafrost melting is changing the migration patterns of species that are important to traditional hunting practices (p. 2)
 * “As noted by Marino (2015:96), vulnerability is not characteristic of a community, but the product of systems of inequality.” (p.2)
 * Indigenous vulnerability and their resilience to climate change was created through the practices of colonialism which put in place the economic conditions that limit indigenous resistance and resilience capacity (NEED TO REWORD) (p. 3)

https://bioone.org/journals/BioScience/volume-61/issue-6/bio.2011.61.6.10/Linking-Indigenous-and-Scientific-Knowledge-of-Climate-Change/10.1525/bio.2011.61.6.10.full

https://minorityrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/MRG_Brief_ClimateC.pdf

Australia
Indigenous knowledge of a changing climate by D. Green · G. Raygorodetsky

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-010-9804-y

“Much of the world’s remaining diversity—biological, ecosystem, landscape, cultural

and linguistic—resides in Indigenous territories. The main knowledge-holders

of the site-specific holistic knowledge about various aspects of this diversity, Indigenous

peoples, play a significant role in maintaining locally resilient social–ecological

Systems.” (1)

Indigneous people of Australia have specific generational traditional knowledge about weather patterns and climatic changes. These communities have adapted to climate change in the past and have knowledge that Western, non-indigneous people can use to adapt to climate change in the future.

‘Strange changes’: Indigenous perspectives of climate change and adaptation in NE Arnhem Land (Australia)

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0959378010000427

Climate Change and Health: Impacts on Remote Indigenous Communities in Northern Australia

https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/1b52/bd0c5ce033ddacfc672bd46311d83a689151.pdf

Stay or leave? Potential climate change adaptation strategies among Aboriginal people in coastal communities in northern Australia

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11069-013-0591-4

Latin America
Indigenous Peoples and climate change in latin america and the carribean

https://elibrary.worldbank.org/doi/pdf/10.1596/978-0-8213-8237-0