Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere
Scientific attention to climate change in the Arctic has spurred extensive research, including many studies of Indigenous knowledge and the effects of climate change on Indigenous peoples. These topics have been reported in many scientific papers, books, and in the IPCC's 2019 Special Report on...
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doaj-b370a00a69e44697a9de17bc528fdf3c2021-06-24T05:14:22ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Climate2624-95532021-06-01310.3389/fclim.2021.675805675805Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic CryosphereLaura Eerkes-Medrano0Henry P. Huntington1Geography Department, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, CanadaHuntington Consulting, Eagle River, AK, United StatesScientific attention to climate change in the Arctic has spurred extensive research, including many studies of Indigenous knowledge and the effects of climate change on Indigenous peoples. These topics have been reported in many scientific papers, books, and in the IPCC's 2019 Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (SROCC), as well as attracting considerable interest in the popular media. We assembled a set of peer-reviewed publications concerning Arctic Indigenous peoples and climate change for the SROCC, to which we have added additional papers discovered through a subsequent literature search. A closer look at the 76 papers in our sample reveals additional emphases on economics, culture, health and mental health, policy and governance, and other topics. While these emphases reflect to some degree the perspectives of the Indigenous peoples involved in the studies, they are also subject to bias from the interests and abilities of the researchers involved, compounded by a lack of comparative research. Our review shows first that climate change does not occur in isolation or even as the primary threat to Indigenous well-being in the Arctic, but the lack of systematic investigation hampers any effort to assess the role of other factors in a comprehensive manner; and second that the common and perhaps prevailing narrative that climate change spells inevitable doom for Arctic Indigenous peoples is contrary to their own narratives of response and resilience. We suggest that there should be a systematic effort in partnership with Indigenous peoples to identify thematic and regional gaps in coverage, supported by targeted funding to fill such gaps. Such an effort may also require recruiting additional researchers with the necessary expertise and providing opportunities for inter-regional information sharing by Arctic Indigenous peoples. As researchers who are visitors to the Arctic, we do not claim that our findings are representative of Indigenous perspectives, only that a more accurate and comprehensive picture of Arctic Indigenous peoples' knowledge of and experiences with climate change is needed. Our analysis also reflects some of the SROCC knowledge gaps and the conclusions provide suggestions for future research.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fclim.2021.675805/fullIndigenousArcticclimateadaptationhealtheconomics |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Laura Eerkes-Medrano Henry P. Huntington |
spellingShingle |
Laura Eerkes-Medrano Henry P. Huntington Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere Frontiers in Climate Indigenous Arctic climate adaptation health economics |
author_facet |
Laura Eerkes-Medrano Henry P. Huntington |
author_sort |
Laura Eerkes-Medrano |
title |
Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere |
title_short |
Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere |
title_full |
Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere |
title_fullStr |
Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere |
title_full_unstemmed |
Untold Stories: Indigenous Knowledge Beyond the Changing Arctic Cryosphere |
title_sort |
untold stories: indigenous knowledge beyond the changing arctic cryosphere |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Climate |
issn |
2624-9553 |
publishDate |
2021-06-01 |
description |
Scientific attention to climate change in the Arctic has spurred extensive research, including many studies of Indigenous knowledge and the effects of climate change on Indigenous peoples. These topics have been reported in many scientific papers, books, and in the IPCC's 2019 Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (SROCC), as well as attracting considerable interest in the popular media. We assembled a set of peer-reviewed publications concerning Arctic Indigenous peoples and climate change for the SROCC, to which we have added additional papers discovered through a subsequent literature search. A closer look at the 76 papers in our sample reveals additional emphases on economics, culture, health and mental health, policy and governance, and other topics. While these emphases reflect to some degree the perspectives of the Indigenous peoples involved in the studies, they are also subject to bias from the interests and abilities of the researchers involved, compounded by a lack of comparative research. Our review shows first that climate change does not occur in isolation or even as the primary threat to Indigenous well-being in the Arctic, but the lack of systematic investigation hampers any effort to assess the role of other factors in a comprehensive manner; and second that the common and perhaps prevailing narrative that climate change spells inevitable doom for Arctic Indigenous peoples is contrary to their own narratives of response and resilience. We suggest that there should be a systematic effort in partnership with Indigenous peoples to identify thematic and regional gaps in coverage, supported by targeted funding to fill such gaps. Such an effort may also require recruiting additional researchers with the necessary expertise and providing opportunities for inter-regional information sharing by Arctic Indigenous peoples. As researchers who are visitors to the Arctic, we do not claim that our findings are representative of Indigenous perspectives, only that a more accurate and comprehensive picture of Arctic Indigenous peoples' knowledge of and experiences with climate change is needed. Our analysis also reflects some of the SROCC knowledge gaps and the conclusions provide suggestions for future research. |
topic |
Indigenous Arctic climate adaptation health economics |
url |
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fclim.2021.675805/full |
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