4.1 Article

Anishinaabek Giikendaaswin and Dùthchas nan Gàidheal: concepts to (re)center place-based knowledges, governance, and land in times of crisis

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ETHNICITIES
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/14687968231219022

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Anishinaabemowin; gaelic; indigenous languages; land; place-based knowledge; traditional ecological knowledge; sustainability; environment; climate crisis; biodiversity

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This paper explores the importance and application of the concepts of "Anishinaabek Giikendaaswin" and "Duthchas nan Gaidheal" for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs) in times of climate crisis. These concepts emphasize the learning and interconnectedness of land, water, and the sky world, as well as the sense of belonging to the land and the importance of ecological balance.
Land is not a commodity, and dominant western society is unsustainable. Examples of unsustainability include severance of peoples from lands and waters; separation of peoples from centers of decision-making; and dispossession of the lands, and traditional territories of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs). IPLCs at the frontlines of the climate crisis are often excluded on vital decisions regarding land management and protection. Taking an emic interpretation by means of lived experiences and auto-ethnographic responses to question prompts, this paper explores the international implications of Anishinaabek Giikendaaswin and Duthchas nan Gaidheal as concepts that can (re)center IPLC place-based knowledges, sustainable governance, and lands in times of climate crisis. Anishinaabek Giikendaaswin is about the learning from the lands, N'ibi (the waters), and the sky world. It is a lived knowledge that has guided and continues to guide Anishinaabek Peoples. G'giikendaaswinmin informs Anishinaabek interconnectedness and interrelationality to the lands, all beings, and the sky world. Duthchas is a millenia-old kincentric concept, informing a Gaidheal (Gael) way of life and traditional land governance that predate the formation of the United Kingdom. Duthchas transmits a sense of belonging to, not possession of the land, and stresses an interconnectedness and ecological balance among all entities. The authors (Anishinaabe and Gaidheal) respond to critical questions, such as How do Giikendaaswin and Duthchas center knowledges that can ensure collective continuance of life? Through a common theme of interconnectedness and what this means for reconstitutive real-life practice, they demonstrate how Indigenous concepts and science based on the expertise of IPLCs can address continued colonial atrocities and current crises. Giikendaaswin and Duthchas have international and transnational implications as discourses of resistance not only to the Anthropocene, but also to ongoing processes of dispossession.

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