Publications
Tribal leaders, scholars and others working with tribes on climate change issues are increasingly engaged in bringing tribal voices to academic literature, agency climate reports, and other publications to demonstrate the impacts of climate change on indigenous communities in the United States, and the measures tribes across the country are taking to address climate change. Abstracts and materials provided by the publications are included in the descriptions.
Publication | Year | Geography | Website |
---|---|---|---|
Barry, John M. 1997 Rising Tide: the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How it Changed America. New York: Simon and Schuster. Categories: flood, politics, race |
1997 | Southeast, United States | Link |
United Nations. 2000. Special Rapporteur on the right to food. Categories: food justice, accessibility, resource allocation, availability, social justice, human rights |
2000 | International, Global | Link |
Inuit Circumpolar Council-Alaska (ICC-AK). 2015. Alaskan Inuit Food Security Conceptual Framework: How to Assess the Arctic from an Inuit Perspective -- Summary and Recommendations Report. Report created as part of 2015 Alaskan Inuit Food Security Conceptual Framework Technical Report. Categories: Food Security, Climate Impacts, Planning, Indigenous Knowledge, Traditional Knowledges |
2015 | International, Alaska, Polar | Link |
Inuit Circumpolar Council-Alaska (ICC-AK). 2015. Alaskan Inuit Food Security Conceptual Framework: How to Assess the Arctic from an Inuit Perspective. Technical Report. Categories: Food Security, Climate Impacts, Planning, Indigenous Knowledge, Traditional Knowledges |
2015 | International, Alaska, Polar | Link |
Ford, J. D., and L. Berrang-Ford, 2009: Food security in Igloolik, Nunavut: An exploratory study. Polar Record, 45, 225-236, doi:10.1017/S0032247408008048.↩ Categories: Food Security, food insecurity, Traditional foods, tribe, indigenous |
2009 | Canada, Arctic | Link |
Mcdermott, Amy. 2017. Growing change: Homegrown food is one safety net in a less stable world for Native Americans. SALON. Categories: food security, subsistence, climate change, diabetes, human health, food-borne illness, sustainability, commodities, garden, |
2017 | California, Smith River, Tolowa, West Coast, United States, Global, International, the Americas | Link |
Sowerwine, J., Mucioki, M., Sarna-Wojcicki, D. et al. Food Sec. (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-019-00925-y Categories: food security, tribal food security, community health, culture, native foods, eco-cultural restoration |
2019 | Klamath River Basin, Southern Oregon, Northern California | Link |
Whyte, Kyle, Indigenous Food Sovereignty, Renewal and U.S. Settler Colonialism (August 4, 2016). The Routledge Handbook of Food Ethics, Forthcoming. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2770056 Categories: Food Sovereignty, Cultural Revitalization, Political Sovereignty, Indigenous Rights, Settler Colonialism, Philosophy |
2016 | National, International | Link |
Couch, J. 2016. Tribal Food Sovereignty: Beyond the Community Garden. FNDI. Categories: food sovereignty, food justice, economy, self-determination, sustainability, self-sufficiency |
2016 | United States, Canada | Link |
Swan, Colleen, Chief Albert P. Naquin, and Stanley Tom. 2015 Building Respectful Solutions. Forced Migration Review: Disasters and Displacement in a Changing Climate, Issue 49. Categories: Forced Migration, Disasters, displacement, tribe, indigenous |
2015 | Southeast | Link |
J.E. Halofsky and D L. Peterson. 2016. Climate Change Vulnerabilities and Adaptation Options for Forest Vegetation Management in the Northwestern USA. Atmosphere, 7(3), 46; doi:10.3390/atmos7030046 Categories: Forest Ecology, Climate Vulnerability Assessment, National Park and Forest Management |
2016 | Northwest | Link |
Seidl, R., Spies, T. A., Peterson, D. L., Stephens, S. L., Hicke, J. A. (2016), REVIEW: Searching for resilience: addressing the impacts of changing disturbance regimes on forest ecosystem services. Journal of Applied Ecology, 53: 120–129. doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.12511 Categories: Forest Ecosystem Services, Forest Disturbance Management, Ecosystem Resilience |
2016 | National | Link |
Colorado State University. "Forest resilience declines in face of wildfires, climate change." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 12 December 2017. . Categories: forest resilience, wildfires, climate change |
2017 | Rocky Mountains, Colorado, Wyoming, Washington, Idaho, Montana | Link |
Kelly E, Gosnell H. 2014. Who Will Own the Mazama? Tribal Power and Forest Ownership in the Klamath Basin. Humboldt journal of social relations. 36: 102-117 Categories: Forest resources, Klamath Basin, tribe, indigenous |
2014 | Northwest | Link |
Fain, S.J.; Kittler, B.; Chowyuk, A. Managing Moist Forests of the Pacific Northwest United States for Climate Positive Outcomes. Forests 2018, 9, 618. Categories: Forests, carbon sequestration, climate policy, forest policy, life cycle assessments, forest management |
2018 | Pacific Northwest | Link |
Reuters. U.S. native groups promised input on development as pipeline dispute looms. 2016. Categories: fossil fuels, climate change, carbon emissions, planning, policy, regulations, sovereignty, |
2016 | United States | Link |
Wilson, Conrad. 2017. Northwest Tribes Call For End To Moving Fossil Fuels Through Gorge. PBS. Categories: fossil fuels, oil, pollution, spill, environmental degradation, sacred places, tribes, sovereignty, self determination |
2017 | Oregon | Link |
The White House, December 2022. "Building a Clean Energy Economy: A Guidebook to the Inflation Reduction Act’s Investments in Clean Energy and Climate Action." www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Inflation-Reduction-Act-Guidebook.pdf Categories: funding, inflation reduction act, IRA, energy |
2022 | National | Link |
Guo Q., Kelly, M., Graham, C H. (2005) Support vector machines for predicting distribution of sudden oak death in California. Ecological Modeling. Vol.182 No.1, p. 75-90. Categories: Geographic information systems, Support vector machines, Potential disease spread, Sudden Oak Death |
2005 | ||
Whyte, Kyle, Indigenous Environmental Movements and the Function of Governance Institutions (April 25, 2016). Whyte, K.P. 2016. Indigenous Environmental Movements and the Function of Governance Institutions. Oxford Handbook of Environmental Political Theory. Edited by T. Gabrielson, C. Hall, J. Meyer & D. Schlosberg, 563-580. Oxford University Press.. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2770066 Categories: Governance, Indigenous Environmental Movements, Reciprocal Responsibilities, Philosophy |
2016 | National, International | Link |
Donoghue, E. and Lynn, K. 2012. A Guide for Tribal Leaders on U.S. Climate Change Programs. Categories: Government programs, adaptation, mitigation, research |
2012 | National | Link |
Native News Online Categories: government, tribal, relations |
2019 | U.S. | Link |
US DOE: Office of the Assistant Secretary – Indian Affairs Office of Indian Energy and Economic Development. 2013. Tribal Energy Development Capacity Grant Program. Available at: http://www.indianaffairs.gov/cs/groups/public/documents/text/idc1-026611.pdf Categories: grant recipients |
2013 | United States | Link |
Ojima, D., J. Steiner, S. McNeeley, K. Cozzetto, and A. Childress, 2013: Great Plains Regional Climate Assessment Technical Report, National Climate Assessment 2013., 301 pp. URL ↩ Categories: Great Plains, assessment |
2013 | Great Plains | Link |
Categories: green building, tribal homes, green infrastructure, energy efficiency, renewable energy, resilience, planning |
National | Link | |
Gilio-Whitaker, Dina. “How to Indigenize the Green New Deal and Environmental Justice.” How to Indigenize the Green New Deal and Environmental Justice -, High Country News, 10 July 2019, www.hcn.org/articles/tribal-affairs-how-to-indigenize-the-green-new-deal-and-environmental-justice. Categories: Green New Deal, environmental justice, indigenize, sovereignty, climate change, tribes |
2019 | National | Link |
Kusnetz, Nicholas. “These Are the Toughest Emissions to Cut, and a Big Chunk of the Climate Problem.” Inside Climate News, 28 June 2018, insideclimatenews.org/news/28062018/global-warming-pollution-industrial-sources-cement-steel-trade-solutions-technology-shipping?utm_source=InsideClimate News&utm_campaign=ee944cfe76-&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_29c928ffb5-ee944cfe76-327881649. Categories: greenhouse gas emissions, pollution, climate change, climate adaptation, cement and steel emissions |
2018 | Global | Link |
Holden, Emily, 2017. Was the Clean Power Plan Really Bad for the Economy? Categories: greenhouse gas regulations, deregulated, coal, natural gas, Clean Power Plan, Trump Administration, energy, footprint |
2017 | National | Link |
Jordan, Richard H. 1984. Neo-Eskimo Prehistory of Greenland. In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 5. Arctic. D. Damas, ed. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. Pp. 540–548. Categories: Greenland, History, tribe, indigenous |
1984 | Global | |
Pitz, Charles. 2016. Predicted Impacts of Climate Change on Groundwater Resources of Washington State. Washington State Department of Ecology. Publication No. 16-03-006 Categories: Groundwater Resources, Climate Impacts, Hydrology, Climate Assessment, Sea-level Rise |
2016 | Northwest, Coastal | Link |
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