4.2 Article

Engaging Transformation: Using Seasonal Rounds to Anticipate Climate Change

Journal

HUMAN ECOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 5, Pages 509-523

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10745-021-00269-2

Keywords

Ecological calendars; Indigenous and local knowledge; Dakota; Lakota Oneida Lake; Pamir Mountains

Funding

  1. Cornell Atkinson Center for A Sustainable Future's
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1650441]
  3. Mountains as Sentinels of Change-Collaborative Research Belmont Forum: Ecological Calendars and Climate Adaptation in the Pamirs (ECCAP)
  4. National Science Foundation (NSF) [1630490]
  5. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [SA 775/12-1]
  6. Italian National Research Council (CNR) [B51J11000840001]

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Seasonal rounds are a methodological approach linking sociocultural relations with ecological systems, informing transdisciplinary research and facilitating community engagement. By creating a common vocabulary and respecting diverse ways of knowing, researchers can anticipate anthropogenic climate change by studying specific biophysical indicators and livelihoods of local communities.
Seasonal rounds are deliberative articulations of a community's sociocultural relations with their ecological system. The process of visualizing seasonal rounds informs transdisciplinary research. We present a methodological approach for communities of enquiry to engage communities of practice through context-specific sociocultural and ecological relations driven by seasonal change. We first discuss historical precis of the concept of seasonal rounds that we apply to assess the spatial and temporal communal migrations and then describe current international research among Indigenous and rural communities in North America and Central Asia by the creation of a common vocabulary through mutual respect for multiple ways of knowing, validation of co-generated knowledge, and insights into seasonal change. By investigating the relationship between specific biophysical indicators and livelihoods of local communities, we demonstrate that seasonal rounds are an inclusive and participatory methodology that brings together diverse Indigenous and rural voices to anticipate anthropogenic climate change.

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