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This edited volume explores the crucial intersections between Indigenous Land-Based Knowledge (ILK), sustainability, settler colonialism, and the ongoing environmental crisis.
Sommario
Editors
Contributors
Chapter 1: Introduction -
Ranjan Datta, Jebunnessa Chapola and John Bosco AcharibasamChapter 2: Walking in My T¿puna Steps: Land-based Resurgence with Women Stories in Aotearoa, New Zeeland -
Kerri CleaverChapter 3: Traditional Storytelling as Land-based Heritage: Reflections from Indigenous Perspectives in Northern Malawi -
Jean Kayira and Tamara MkandawireChapter 4: Soulfully in Movement on the Land, as a Shiibaashka'igan Expressionist: Embodied Knowing and Anishinaabe Dance -
Karen Pheasant-NeganigwaneChapter 5: Indigenous Land Sovereignty and Food Security in Saskatchewan, Canada -
Marlin LegareChapter 6: Land-based Learning and Its Implications for Preserving Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Ghana -
Raphael Ane Atanga, John Bosco Acharibasam, Sampson Kwasi Jachan, Mawuli Kwasi Gafli and Godfred Adjei PokuChapter 7: Land-Based Learning as a Methodology for Understanding Indigenous Water Governance -
John Bosco Acharibasam, Ranjan Datta, Margot Hurlbert and Angelina WeenieChapter 8: The Impact of the Climate Crisis on Forced Migration among Indigenous Communities in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of Bangladesh -
Arifatul Kibria and Ranjan DattaChapter 9: Traditional Bengali Land-based Beadwork - A Form of Creating Belongingness for a Racialized Immigrant Woman in Canada -
Bipasha Mondol and Ranjan DattaChapter 10: Taking Responsibility in Land-based Learning from a Racialized Woman's Perspective in Canada -
Navi ToorChapter 11: Decolonizing the Meaning of Land Acknowledgement: From and within Treat 7 Indigenous Perspectives, Canada -
Ryan WhitfordChapter 12: Conservation Ethos of Indigenous Munda Community vis à vis Land Grabbing Battles in Bangladesh's Sundarban Mangroves -
Sujoy Subroto and Conny DavidsenChapter 13: Unlearning to Relearning: Journey in Co-creating Space for Decolonization and Reconciliation -
Makayla KrauseChapter 14: Creating Safe and Inclusive Spaces for Communities at Risk to Be Involved in Land-based Eco-action -
Baneen Al-SachitChapter 15: Responsibility in Indigenous Land-based Knowledge and Environmental Sustainability -
Ranjan Datta, Jebunnessa Chapola and John Bosco AcharibasamIndex
Info autore
Ranjan Datta is a Canada Research chair in Community Disaster Research at the Department of Humanities, Mount Royal University, Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Ranjan's research interests include advocating for critical anti-racist perspectives on community disaster research, Indigenous environmental sustainability, community-led climate change solutions, and decolonial community research. His current research program is supported by his existing network of Indigenous, visible minority immigrants and refugees, Black communities, scholars, students, practitioners, and professionals in Canada and beyond. In Datta's community service activities, he has been involved with social well-being and justice movements.
Jebunnessa Chapola serves as a SSHRC postdoctoral fellow at the Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy, University of Regina, Canada. Dr. Jebunnessa Chapola is a settler woman of colour trained as an anti-racist, decolonial feminist educator. Her research spans environmental reconciliation, decolonial feminist research, transnational feminism, anti-racist theory, and Indigenous women-led climate change solutions, reflecting her commitment to cross-cultural responsibility, gender equity, social justice, and environmental resilience.
John Bosco Acharibasam is a SSHRC postdoctoral fellow at Mount Royal University in Canada and is dedicated to addressing social and environmental justice concerns within Black and other marginalized communities. His overarching research objective is to mitigate environmental vulnerabilities and health disparities among Black, Indigenous, and marginalized populations. As an immigrant scholar, John recognizes the imperative of fostering cross-cultural connections among BIPOC communities in Saskatchewan, Canada. His scholarly pursuits encompass decolonizing methodologies, climate change, public health, and anti-racism initiatives.
Riassunto
This edited volume explores the crucial intersections between Indigenous Land-Based Knowledge (ILK), sustainability, settler colonialism, and the ongoing environmental crisis.