Community-based assessments of change, contributions of Inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic

An emerging theme in climate research is bridging the gap between Western science and Inuit knowledge of climate change to better understand Arctic climate change. This thesis is encouragement for this theme. Based in part on the collaborative research project 'Inuit Observations of Climate Cha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Riedlinger, Dyanna
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1940
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/1940 2023-06-18T03:38:50+02:00 Community-based assessments of change, contributions of Inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic Riedlinger, Dyanna 2001-01-01T00:00:00Z 8449496 bytes 184 bytes application/pdf text/plain http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1940 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1940 open access master thesis 2001 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:42:14Z An emerging theme in climate research is bridging the gap between Western science and Inuit knowledge of climate change to better understand Arctic climate change. This thesis is encouragement for this theme. Based in part on the collaborative research project 'Inuit Observations of Climate Change' (1999-2000) in Sachs Harbour, Western Canadian Arctic, I describe how local, land-based expertise and community-based assessments can provide observations, predictions and explanations of climate change at scales and in contexts currently underrepresented in climate change research. Firsthand experience working with local experts and scientists is used as a basis for a conceptual framework that explains how to find common ground between Inuvialuit traditional knowledge and Western science. This framework includes five areas of convergence in which traditional knowledge can complement scientific approaches to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic. These areas are: the contributions of traditional knowledge (i) as local scale expertise; (ii) as a source of climate history and baseline data; (iii) in formulating research questions and hypotheses; (iv) as insight into impacts and adaptation in Arctic communities; and (v) for long term, community-based monitoring. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) Master Thesis Arctic Climate change inuit Inuvialuit Sachs Harbour MSpace at the University of Manitoba Arctic Sachs Harbour ENVELOPE(-125.280,-125.280,71.975,71.975)
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
description An emerging theme in climate research is bridging the gap between Western science and Inuit knowledge of climate change to better understand Arctic climate change. This thesis is encouragement for this theme. Based in part on the collaborative research project 'Inuit Observations of Climate Change' (1999-2000) in Sachs Harbour, Western Canadian Arctic, I describe how local, land-based expertise and community-based assessments can provide observations, predictions and explanations of climate change at scales and in contexts currently underrepresented in climate change research. Firsthand experience working with local experts and scientists is used as a basis for a conceptual framework that explains how to find common ground between Inuvialuit traditional knowledge and Western science. This framework includes five areas of convergence in which traditional knowledge can complement scientific approaches to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic. These areas are: the contributions of traditional knowledge (i) as local scale expertise; (ii) as a source of climate history and baseline data; (iii) in formulating research questions and hypotheses; (iv) as insight into impacts and adaptation in Arctic communities; and (v) for long term, community-based monitoring. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
format Master Thesis
author Riedlinger, Dyanna
spellingShingle Riedlinger, Dyanna
Community-based assessments of change, contributions of Inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic
author_facet Riedlinger, Dyanna
author_sort Riedlinger, Dyanna
title Community-based assessments of change, contributions of Inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic
title_short Community-based assessments of change, contributions of Inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic
title_full Community-based assessments of change, contributions of Inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic
title_fullStr Community-based assessments of change, contributions of Inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Community-based assessments of change, contributions of Inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic
title_sort community-based assessments of change, contributions of inuvialuit knowledge to understanding climate change in the canadian arctic
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1940
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.280,-125.280,71.975,71.975)
geographic Arctic
Sachs Harbour
geographic_facet Arctic
Sachs Harbour
genre Arctic
Climate change
inuit
Inuvialuit
Sachs Harbour
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
inuit
Inuvialuit
Sachs Harbour
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1940
op_rights open access
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