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This book explores cooperation between humans and animals in extreme environments and contends that understanding domestication is crucial to explaining how life is possible in such conditions.
List of contents
1. Introduction: The Benefits of the Cold and Domestication
Florian Stammler and Hiroki Takakura Section I: Cross-Cutting Perspective on Northern Domestication 2. The North as a Space for Innovation in Human-Animal-Environment Adaptation
Hiroki Takakura 3. Domestication and Adaptation of Pastoral Animals and Human Livelihoods to the Arctic: An Integrated Genetic-Anthropological Approach
Juha Kantanen and Florian Stammler Section II: Domestication Among Hunters 4. Domus-Sharing in the Vicinity of Domestication: An Ethnography of Human-Wildlife-Land Interactions in Interior Alaska
Shiaki Kondo 5. From Relatives to Enemies: Emplaced Evenki Relationships with Wolves in the Changing Environment of East Siberia and the Russian Far East
Donatas Brandišauskas Section III: Convivial Ecology Embracing Animal Autonomy 6. On Encountering and Holding Reindeer in a Convivial North
David G. Anderson 7. Reindeer Riding and Driving: A Preliminary Essay on the Use of Domesticated Reindeer for Transportation
Shiro Sasaki 8. Between Foot Rot and Wolves: The Internal and External Threats of Tozhu Reindeer Herding
Charles Stépanoff 9. Fish Sharing between Humans and Reindeer in the Western Siberian Forest and the Mode of Herding
Yuka Oishi Section IV: Cold Domestication Beyond the Arctic 10. Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) of Steppe Land for '
Dzud' Disaster Reduction in the Mongolian Nomadic Community
Takuya Soma 11. Revisiting the Distinction between Wild and Domestic: The Relationship between Herders and Camelids in the Central Andean Highlands of Peru
Asami Tsukuda Section V: Domestication Beyond Animals: Of Culture, Nature, and the Law 12. Laws of Domestication and Domesticating the Law in Yakutian Human-Animal Relations
Aytalina Ivanova and Florian Stammler 13. Domesticating Wolves While Colonizing Their Hunters: Related Patterns of Categorization to Promote Supposed Sustainability in Northern Sweden
Hugh Beach
About the author
Florian Stammler is Research Professor in Anthropology and coordinates the Anthropology Research Team at the Arctic Centre of the University of Lapland, Finland. He has lived with people and led research in Arctic Russia, Finland, and Greenland, and published extensively on human-animal relations, Arctic extractive industries, oral history, and youth well-being.
Hiroki Takakura is a social anthropologist and Director and Professor at the Center for Northeast Asian Studies, Tohoku University, Japan. His research interests cover human-animal relations, climate change, disaster resilience, ethnicity, and arctic human history including the ethnohistory of Siberia and Northeast Asia.
Summary
This book explores cooperation between humans and animals in extreme environments and contends that understanding domestication is crucial to explaining how life is possible in such conditions.