Community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the Monpa of Arunachal Pradesh

Community knowledge and local institutions play a significant role in sustainable comanagement, use and conservation of natural resources. Looking to the importance of these resources, a project, funded by the National Innovation Foundation (NIF), Ahmedabad, India was implemented to document the com...

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Main Authors: Ranjay K. Singh, Amish K. Sureja
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2006-04-01
Series:The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.td-sa.net/index.php/td/article/view/309
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spelling doaj-28aad423cd6b407ead7a749b03fa0e6c2020-11-24T21:18:25ZengAOSISThe Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa1817-44342415-20052006-04-012110.4102/td.v2i1.309290Community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the Monpa of Arunachal PradeshRanjay K. Singh0Amish K. Sureja1Central Agricultural UniversityCentral Agricultural UniversityCommunity knowledge and local institutions play a significant role in sustainable comanagement, use and conservation of natural resources. Looking to the importance of these resources, a project, funded by the National Innovation Foundation (NIF), Ahmedabad, India was implemented to document the community knowledge associated with agriculture and natural resources in few selected Monpa tribe dominating villages of West Kameng and Tawang Districts of Arunachal Pradesh, India. Dynamics of various indigenous practices, gender role, culture and informal rural social institutions, cultural edges significantly contribute in managing and using the natural resources sustainably. Experiential learning and location specific knowledge play a pivotal role in ecosystem sustainability. Study also indicates the synergistic relation existing between local knowledge and ecological edges, thereby helping in sustaining livelihood in high altitude. Indigenous resource management systems are not mere traditions but adaptive responses that have evolved over time.http://www.td-sa.net/index.php/td/article/view/309Monpa tribe, natural resources management, pastoralist, biodiversity, local institutions, community knowledge, sustainability.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ranjay K. Singh
Amish K. Sureja
spellingShingle Ranjay K. Singh
Amish K. Sureja
Community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the Monpa of Arunachal Pradesh
The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa
Monpa tribe, natural resources management, pastoralist, biodiversity, local institutions, community knowledge, sustainability.
author_facet Ranjay K. Singh
Amish K. Sureja
author_sort Ranjay K. Singh
title Community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the Monpa of Arunachal Pradesh
title_short Community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the Monpa of Arunachal Pradesh
title_full Community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the Monpa of Arunachal Pradesh
title_fullStr Community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the Monpa of Arunachal Pradesh
title_full_unstemmed Community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the Monpa of Arunachal Pradesh
title_sort community knowledge and sustainable natural resources management: learning from the monpa of arunachal pradesh
publisher AOSIS
series The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa
issn 1817-4434
2415-2005
publishDate 2006-04-01
description Community knowledge and local institutions play a significant role in sustainable comanagement, use and conservation of natural resources. Looking to the importance of these resources, a project, funded by the National Innovation Foundation (NIF), Ahmedabad, India was implemented to document the community knowledge associated with agriculture and natural resources in few selected Monpa tribe dominating villages of West Kameng and Tawang Districts of Arunachal Pradesh, India. Dynamics of various indigenous practices, gender role, culture and informal rural social institutions, cultural edges significantly contribute in managing and using the natural resources sustainably. Experiential learning and location specific knowledge play a pivotal role in ecosystem sustainability. Study also indicates the synergistic relation existing between local knowledge and ecological edges, thereby helping in sustaining livelihood in high altitude. Indigenous resource management systems are not mere traditions but adaptive responses that have evolved over time.
topic Monpa tribe, natural resources management, pastoralist, biodiversity, local institutions, community knowledge, sustainability.
url http://www.td-sa.net/index.php/td/article/view/309
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