Linking marine conservation and Indigenous cultural revitalization: First Nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological traps

Continuity of coastal Indigenous cultures relies on healthy ecosystems and opportunity to fulfill cultural practices. Owing to resource stewardship practice over millennia, Indigenous nations possess Indigenous knowledge that positions them as leaders in contemporary resource management. However, In...

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Main Authors: Lauren E. Eckert, Natalie C. Ban, Snxakila-Clyde Tallio, Nancy Turner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2018-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss4/art23/
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spelling doaj-15da6b8302e943dcb53ea0cb6204d3722020-11-25T00:03:05ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872018-12-012342310.5751/ES-10417-23042310417Linking marine conservation and Indigenous cultural revitalization: First Nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological trapsLauren E. Eckert0Natalie C. Ban1Snxakila-Clyde Tallio2Nancy Turner3University of Victoria Department of GeographyUniversity of Victoria School of Environmental StudiesAncestral Governance Project, Nuxalk NationUniversity of Victoria School of Environmental StudiesContinuity of coastal Indigenous cultures relies on healthy ecosystems and opportunity to fulfill cultural practices. Owing to resource stewardship practice over millennia, Indigenous nations possess Indigenous knowledge that positions them as leaders in contemporary resource management. However, Indigenous peoples possibly face social-ecological traps, situations in which feedbacks between social and ecological systems result in an undesirable state, that are challenging to overcome. Centuries of compounding colonization and environmental degradation have negatively impacted Indigenous knowledge and culturally mediated stewardship practices. Our partnership, comprising academics and four First Nations on the Central Coast of British Columbia, Canada, mobilized information from semistructured interviews with knowledge holders to explore Indigenous knowledge of a culturally important but vulnerable species, yelloweye rockfish (Sebastes ruberrimus). We analyzed interviews and discovered evidence of an extant but transcendable social-ecological trap. The emergent themes represent an exploration beyond our original project goals and research questions. Our study revealed that external forces of colonization, i.e., via forced assimilation, and species declines created a social-ecological trap. However, participants ubiquitously described stewardship principles, and noted ongoing cultural revitalization efforts, active recovery of depleted species, and reassertion of Indigenous management rights as ways they are rebelling against, and overcoming, the trap. Although the framing of a social-ecological trap may be perceived as diminishing the authority of Indigenous governance systems, we found the opposite to be true. Despite external pressures, coastal First Nations are reasserting cultural and management rights and shaping their futures. We suggest that ongoing Indigenous cultural renewal and ecosystem recovery in the face of the historically entrenched trap be supported through recognizing and implementing inherent Indigenous marine management rights. The social-ecological trap described here differs from others in the literature in that the creation of the trap was external; moving beyond it is happening through internal, i.e., led by the First Nations, efforts.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss4/art23/fisheriesIndigenous knowledgemarine conservationsocial-ecological traptraditional ecological knowledgeyelloweye rockfish
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren E. Eckert
Natalie C. Ban
Snxakila-Clyde Tallio
Nancy Turner
spellingShingle Lauren E. Eckert
Natalie C. Ban
Snxakila-Clyde Tallio
Nancy Turner
Linking marine conservation and Indigenous cultural revitalization: First Nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological traps
Ecology and Society
fisheries
Indigenous knowledge
marine conservation
social-ecological trap
traditional ecological knowledge
yelloweye rockfish
author_facet Lauren E. Eckert
Natalie C. Ban
Snxakila-Clyde Tallio
Nancy Turner
author_sort Lauren E. Eckert
title Linking marine conservation and Indigenous cultural revitalization: First Nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological traps
title_short Linking marine conservation and Indigenous cultural revitalization: First Nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological traps
title_full Linking marine conservation and Indigenous cultural revitalization: First Nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological traps
title_fullStr Linking marine conservation and Indigenous cultural revitalization: First Nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological traps
title_full_unstemmed Linking marine conservation and Indigenous cultural revitalization: First Nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological traps
title_sort linking marine conservation and indigenous cultural revitalization: first nations free themselves from externally imposed social-ecological traps
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Continuity of coastal Indigenous cultures relies on healthy ecosystems and opportunity to fulfill cultural practices. Owing to resource stewardship practice over millennia, Indigenous nations possess Indigenous knowledge that positions them as leaders in contemporary resource management. However, Indigenous peoples possibly face social-ecological traps, situations in which feedbacks between social and ecological systems result in an undesirable state, that are challenging to overcome. Centuries of compounding colonization and environmental degradation have negatively impacted Indigenous knowledge and culturally mediated stewardship practices. Our partnership, comprising academics and four First Nations on the Central Coast of British Columbia, Canada, mobilized information from semistructured interviews with knowledge holders to explore Indigenous knowledge of a culturally important but vulnerable species, yelloweye rockfish (Sebastes ruberrimus). We analyzed interviews and discovered evidence of an extant but transcendable social-ecological trap. The emergent themes represent an exploration beyond our original project goals and research questions. Our study revealed that external forces of colonization, i.e., via forced assimilation, and species declines created a social-ecological trap. However, participants ubiquitously described stewardship principles, and noted ongoing cultural revitalization efforts, active recovery of depleted species, and reassertion of Indigenous management rights as ways they are rebelling against, and overcoming, the trap. Although the framing of a social-ecological trap may be perceived as diminishing the authority of Indigenous governance systems, we found the opposite to be true. Despite external pressures, coastal First Nations are reasserting cultural and management rights and shaping their futures. We suggest that ongoing Indigenous cultural renewal and ecosystem recovery in the face of the historically entrenched trap be supported through recognizing and implementing inherent Indigenous marine management rights. The social-ecological trap described here differs from others in the literature in that the creation of the trap was external; moving beyond it is happening through internal, i.e., led by the First Nations, efforts.
topic fisheries
Indigenous knowledge
marine conservation
social-ecological trap
traditional ecological knowledge
yelloweye rockfish
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss4/art23/
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