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 |
---|---|---|---|
DOC, 2003: Statement of Associate Administrator Levy on the Status of Telecommunications in Indian Country, US Department of Commerce to the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, Hearing on the Status of Telecommunications in Indian Country. May 22, 2003. U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, D.C. URL ↩ Categories: Telecommunications, tribe, indigenous |
2003 | United States | |
Schuessler, Ryan. 2016. This Could Explain All Those Strong Happenings in Alaska’s Waters: The Washington Post. Categories: Toxins and Pollution, Environmental Degradation, Algae, Environmental Science. |
2016 | Alaska | Link |
Kellogg, Joshua, Jinzhi Wang, Courtney Flint, David Ribnicky, Peter Kuhn, Elvira González De Mejia, Ilya Raskin and Mary Ann Lila, 2010: Alaskan Wild Berry Resources and Human Health under the Cloud of Climate Change. J. Agric. Food Chem., 2010, 58 (7), pp 3884– 3900 DOI: 10.1021/jf902693r Categories: traditional ecological knowledge, adipocytes, diabetes, Obesity, metabolic syndrome, tribe, indigenous |
2010 | Alaska, Arctic | |
Laidre KL, Northey AD and Ugarte F (2018) Traditional Knowledge About Polar Bears (Ursus maritimus) in East Greenland: Changes in the Catch and Climate Over Two Decades. Front. Mar. Sci. 5:135. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2018.00135 Categories: Traditional Ecological Knowledge, climate change, biology, environment, polar bears, traditional food |
2018 | Greenland | Link |
Baumflek, M., Greenlaw, S. (2018). United States Department of Agriculture Southern Research Station. Traditional ecological knowledge helps researchers understand the effects of plant harvesting. Categories: traditional ecological knowledge, sustainability, traditional harvesting and gathering, plant populations |
2018 | Maine, Northern America | Link |
Verbrugge, L., 2010: Traditional Foods in Alaska: Potential Threats from Contaminants and Climate Change. State of Alaska Division of Public Health. URL ↩ Categories: traditional food, Climate change, tribe, indigenous |
2010 | Alaska, Arctic | |
Lynn, K., J. Daigle, J. Hoffman, F. Lake, N. Michelle, D. Ranco, C. Viles, G. Voggesser, and P. Williams, 2013: The impacts of climate change on tribal traditional foods. Climatic Change, 120, 545-556, doi:10.1007/s10584-013-0736-1.↩ Categories: traditional food, Place, Culture, Adaptation, tribe, indigenous |
2013 | United States | Link |
Grah, O., and J. Beaulieu, 2013: The effect of climate change on glacier ablation and baseflow support in the Nooksack River basin and implications on Pacific salmonid species protection and recovery. Climatic Change, 120, 657-670, doi:10.1007/s10584-013-0747-y.↩ Categories: traditional food, Salmon, tribe, indigenous |
2013 | Pacific Northwest | Link |
Himes-Cornell, A., & Kasperski, S. (2015). Assessing climate change vulnerability in Alaska's fishing communities. Fisheries Research, 162, 1-11. Categories: Traditional foods, Climate change, Fishing, Alaska, tribe, indigenous |
2015 | Alaska, Arctic | Link |
Norgaard, K. Marie, 2005: The Effects of Altered Diet on the Health of the Karuk People. 110 pp., Karuk Tribe of California. URL ↩ Categories: Traditional foods, climate chnage, Health, Karuk Tribe, tribe, indigenous |
2005 | Northwest | |
Little, Jane Braxton. “Fire and Agroforestry Are Reviving Traditional Native Foods and Communities.” Civil Eats, 11 Oct. 2018. Categories: traditional foods, community health, prescribed fire, agroforestry, Klamath River watershed, ecosystem health |
2018 | Northern California | Link |
Earle, Lynda, 2011: Traditional Aboriginal Diets and Health. National Collaborating Centre for Aborignal Health. Categories: Traditional foods, Indigenous health, Canada, tribe, indigenous |
2011 | Canada | Link |
Guyot, M., C. Dickson, C. Paci, C. Furgal, and H. M. Chan, 2006: A study of two northern peoples and local effects of climate change on traditional food security. International Journal of Circumpolar Health, 65, 403-415, doi:10.3402/ijch.v65i5.18135. URL Categories: Traditional foods, tribe, indigenous |
2006 | Arctic | |
Dominique M David-Chavez and Michael C Gavin 2018 Environ. Res. Lett. 13 123005 Categories: traditional knowledge systems, climate change, adaptation, indigenous communities |
2018 | Link | |
Williams, T., & Hardison, P. (2013). Culture, law, risk and governance: contexts of traditional knowledge in climate change adaptation. Climatic Change, 120(3), 531-544. Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation, FPIC, tribe, indigenous |
2013 | Global | Link |
Climate and Traditional Knowledges Workgroup (CTKW) (2014) Guidelines for considering traditional knowledges in climate change initiatives, Brochure. https://climatetkw.wordpress.com Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Adaptation, resilience |
2014 | Global | Link |
Fienup-Riordan, Anna, and Alice Rearden. 2012. Ellavut / Our Yup'ik World and Weathe. Continuity and Change on the Bering Sea Coast.Seattle: University of Washington Press. Categories: Traditional Knowledge, cultural transmission, tribe, indigenous |
2012 | Alaska, Arctic | Link |
Knapp C.N., Trainor S. F. 2015. Alaskan stakeholder-defined research needs in the context of climate change. Polar Geography. Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Culture, Climate change, Worldviews, Stakeholder-defined research, tribe, indigenous |
2015 | Alaska, Arctic | Link |
Changing Times, Changing Stories: Climate Change Perspectives Vary Notably Among Generations in Subarctic Alaska. USGS. 2016. Categories: traditional knowledge, experiential learning, contemporary, modern, youth, elders |
2016 | Alaska | Link |
Khalafzai, Muhammad-Arshad K., et al. “Flooding in the James Bay Region of Northern Ontario, Canada: Learning from Traditional Knowledge of Kashechewan First Nation.” International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 27 Feb. 2019, doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijdrr.2019.101100. Categories: traditional knowledge, floods, disaster management, collaboration, warming temperatures, snowmelt, monitoring, indigenous communities |
2019 | Northern Ontario, Canada | Link |
Voggesser G, Lynn K, Daigle J, Lake FK, Ranco D (2013) Cultural Impacts to Tribes from Climate Change Influences on Forests. Climatic Change. DOI # 10.1007/s10584-013-0733-4. Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Forest resources, Adaptation, Management, tribe, indigenous |
2013 | United States | Link |
Lake, Frank K.; Giardina, Christian P.; Parrotta, John A.; Davidson-Hunt, Iain. 2018. Considering diverse knowledge systems in forest landscape restoration. In: Mansourian, S., Parrotta, J., eds. Forest Landscape Restoration: Integrated approaches to support effective implementation. New York: Routledge: 37-46. Chapter 3. Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Forests, Landscapes, Restoration |
2018 | National | Link |
Lake, Frank K.; Giardina, Christian P.; Parrotta, John A.; Davidson-Hunt, Iain. 2018. Considering diverse knowledge systems in forest landscape restoration. In: Mansourian, S., Parrotta, J., eds. Forest Landscape Restoration: Integrated approaches to support effective implementation. New York: Routledge: 37-46. Chapter 3. Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Forests, Landscapes, Restoration |
2018 | Link | |
Lake, Frank K.; Parrotta, John; Giardina, Christian P.; Davidson-Hunt, Iain; Uprety, Yadav. 2018. Integration of Traditional and Western knowledge in forest landscape restoration. In: Mansourian, S., Parrotta, J., eds. Forest Landscape Restoration: Integrated approaches to support effective implementation. New York: Routledge: 198-226. Chapter 12. Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Forests, Landscapes, Restoration, Social, Economic |
2018 | National | Link |
McLean, Kirsty Galloway, Ameyali Ramos-Castillo, Tony Gross, Sam Johnston, Marjo Vierros, and Rahera Noa 2009. Report of the Indigenous Peoples’ Global Summit on Climate Change. April 20-24. Anchorage, Alaska. United Nations University—Traditional Knowledge Initiative, Darwin, Australia. Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Global Summit, tribe, indigenous |
2009 | Global | |
Climate Change Adaptation: Traditional Knowledge of Indigenous Peoples Inhabiting the Arctic and Far North. UNESCO. 2016. Categories: Traditional knowledge, Indigeneity, climate change, mitigation, adaptation |
2016 | International | Link |
Brewer, Joseph and Kronk Warner, Elizabeth Ann, Guarding Against Exploitation: Protecting Indigenous Knowledge in the Age of Climate Change (February 20, 2015). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2567995 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2567995 Categories: Traditional Knowledge, indigenous knowledge, Climate change, intellectual property, tribes, Native Americans, American Indians, indigenous people, Indians |
2015 | United States | Link |
UCAR congressional briefing highlights flood, drought prediction: Nation poised to make major advances in "water intelligence". UCAR. 2016. Categories: traditional knowledge, indigenous, climate science, water health, water rights, protection |
2016 | National | Link |
Saez, Catherine. On Eve Of WIPO Traditional Knowledge Negotiations, Nations Swap Experiences. IPW. 2016. Categories: traditional knowledge, intellectual property, protection, retention, collaboration, TEK, knowledge sovereignty |
2016 | International, Global | Link |
Arnakak, Jaypeetee. 2002. Incorporation of Inuit Qaujimanituqangit, or Inuit traditional knowledge, into the Government of Nunavut. The Journal of Aboriginal Economic Development 3(1):Knowledge Categories: Traditional Knowledge, Inuit traditional knowledge, Qaujimanituqangit (IQ), Sustainable Development, tribe, indigenous |
2002 | Canada, Arctic | Link |
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