Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia

In this paper we explore how Western scientific concepts and attitudes towards indigenous knowledge, as they pertain to resource management and climate change, differ from the prevailing view in modern Russia. Western indigenous leaders representing the Inuit and Saami peoples are actively engaged i...

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Main Authors: Forbes, Bruce C., Stammler, Florian
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://library.arcticportal.org/475/
http://library.arcticportal.org/475/1/por_100.pdf
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spelling ftarcticportal:oai:generic.eprints.org:475 2023-05-15T14:23:54+02:00 Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia Forbes, Bruce C. Stammler, Florian 2009 application/pdf http://library.arcticportal.org/475/ http://library.arcticportal.org/475/1/por_100.pdf en eng http://library.arcticportal.org/475/1/por_100.pdf Forbes, Bruce C. and Stammler, Florian (2009) Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia. Polar Research (28). pp. 28-42. Indigenous Peoples Local Communities Law and Policy Sustainable Development Article PeerReviewed 2009 ftarcticportal 2022-03-24T20:15:26Z In this paper we explore how Western scientific concepts and attitudes towards indigenous knowledge, as they pertain to resource management and climate change, differ from the prevailing view in modern Russia. Western indigenous leaders representing the Inuit and Saami peoples are actively engaged in the academic and political discourse surrounding climate change, whereas their Russian colleagues tend to focus more on legislation and self-determination, as a post-Soviet legacy. We contribute to the debate with data from the Nenets tundra, showing how different research has employed the three crucial Western research paradigms of climate change, wildlife management and indigenous knowledge on the ground. We suggest that the daily practice of tundra nomadism involves permanent processes of negotiating one’s position in a changing environment, which is why “adaptation” is woven into the society, and cosmology as a whole, rather than being separable into distinct “bodies” of knowledge or Western-designed categories. We argue that research agendas should be placed in their proper local and regional context, and temporal framework: for example, by collaborating with herders on the topics of weather instead of climate change, herding skills instead of wildlife management, and ways of engaging with the tundra instead of traditional ecological knowledge. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Climate change inuit nenets Polar Research saami Tundra Arctic Portal Library Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Portal Library
op_collection_id ftarcticportal
language English
topic Indigenous Peoples
Local Communities
Law and Policy
Sustainable Development
spellingShingle Indigenous Peoples
Local Communities
Law and Policy
Sustainable Development
Forbes, Bruce C.
Stammler, Florian
Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia
topic_facet Indigenous Peoples
Local Communities
Law and Policy
Sustainable Development
description In this paper we explore how Western scientific concepts and attitudes towards indigenous knowledge, as they pertain to resource management and climate change, differ from the prevailing view in modern Russia. Western indigenous leaders representing the Inuit and Saami peoples are actively engaged in the academic and political discourse surrounding climate change, whereas their Russian colleagues tend to focus more on legislation and self-determination, as a post-Soviet legacy. We contribute to the debate with data from the Nenets tundra, showing how different research has employed the three crucial Western research paradigms of climate change, wildlife management and indigenous knowledge on the ground. We suggest that the daily practice of tundra nomadism involves permanent processes of negotiating one’s position in a changing environment, which is why “adaptation” is woven into the society, and cosmology as a whole, rather than being separable into distinct “bodies” of knowledge or Western-designed categories. We argue that research agendas should be placed in their proper local and regional context, and temporal framework: for example, by collaborating with herders on the topics of weather instead of climate change, herding skills instead of wildlife management, and ways of engaging with the tundra instead of traditional ecological knowledge.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Forbes, Bruce C.
Stammler, Florian
author_facet Forbes, Bruce C.
Stammler, Florian
author_sort Forbes, Bruce C.
title Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia
title_short Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia
title_full Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia
title_fullStr Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia
title_full_unstemmed Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia
title_sort arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the west and russia
publishDate 2009
url http://library.arcticportal.org/475/
http://library.arcticportal.org/475/1/por_100.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic
Climate change
inuit
nenets
Polar Research
saami
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Climate change
inuit
nenets
Polar Research
saami
Tundra
op_relation http://library.arcticportal.org/475/1/por_100.pdf
Forbes, Bruce C. and Stammler, Florian (2009) Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia. Polar Research (28). pp. 28-42.
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