Search results for "Indigenous"

showing 10 items of 176 documents

¿Solamente platos? Cerámicas de barniz rojo en el depósito ibérico del Zacatín (Granada)

2015

We have taken, as a subject of our study, a homogeneous set of red indigenous glazed plates with a very particular profile and without a parallel known for the present time. The above mentioned set was part of the ritual deposit found in Zacatin, a very typical street from Granada. This deposit is a pit close to the River Darro which was filled with the waste of a sacred banquet, possibly related to this same river. In this work we consider the fact that these plates were made ex profeso for the ritual that took place out of Iliberri 's walls, around 370 B.C.

BanquetArcheologyGeographyUNESCO::HISTORIAHomogeneousSubject (philosophy)Humanidades:HISTORIA [UNESCO]HumanitiesGenealogyIndigenousHistoria
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Non-Indigenous Species (NIS) within Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). The case study of the Aegadian Islands MPA (Sicily, Tyrrhenian Sea) and the Dwejra…

2018

The introduction of non-indigenous species (NIS) has been pointed out as a major threat to biodiversity. NIS may become invasive alien species (IAS) and may cause biodiversity loss and ecosystem service changes. In the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and surrounding islands, also including a high number of Marine Protected Area (MPAs), as a consequence of their geographic position and the intense maritime traffic, is a region particularly vulnerable and prone to NIS invasions. Since frontiers do not exist in the sea, biological invasions may severely affect MPAs, whose major aim is biodiversity conservation. Among the Sicilian MPAs, the Aegadian Islands MPA report the highest number of NIS (19). M…

Biodiversity Marine Protected Areas Mediterranean Sea Non-Indigenous SpeciesSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicata
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Ecotourism in Bolivia : an ethnographical study of ecotourism impacts in Madidi National Park

2016

Master thesis development management - University of Agder 2016 The concepts of ecotourism are widely defined but it is often used as a marketing instrument in order to promote tourism businesses related to nature. Ecotourism experience a fast growth in world tourism industry and many developing countries are trying to use ecotourism as a tool to achieve sustainable development. Ecotourism provides many beneficiaries to local environments, economies and socio-cultural lives. However, ecotourism may as well have harmful effects on those involved. Still, ecotourism conserves and protects local areas and its people. Madidi National Park in Bolivia has been estimated to be one of the world’s mo…

Boliviatourism impactspotentialsecotourismMadidi National Parksustainable developmentUT503VDP::Social science: 200::Social anthropology: 250indigenous communitieschallengesrainforest
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The conservation of the environment in Ecuador's constitution

2017

The 2008 Ecuadorian Constitution is often presented as building on the local traditions of indigenous peoples in order to propose a non-anthropocentric approach to the conservation of the environment, based on the concept of buen vivir. After providing a short introduction on anthropocentric and non-anthropo-centric approaches to the environment, with attention to indigenous worldviews, this article attempts to: analyse the concept of buen vivir, appearing to have unclear boundaries; understand whether or not it is a concept derived from indigenous worldviews; and explore the innovative non-anthropocentric feature of the recognition of rights to the environment. Finally, the article uses th…

Buen vivir Constitution Ecuador Environmental rights Indigenous peoplesSettore SPS/01 - Filosofia PoliticaK
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Biopiracy and the right to self-determination of indigenous peoples.

2018

Abstract Background: Since over thirty years, I work on the unclear legal situation of in which indigenous peoples find themselves today in the beginning mainly in the USA and later also in Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The status of indigenous people and native nations is characterized as a mixture of national and international law. Hypothesis/Purpose: To clarify the status of indigenous people it is necessary to analyze and interpret carefully hundreds of old treaties, international declarations and covenants, national statutes and jurisprudence, especially the old leading decisions of the US-Supreme Court. Such an analysis and interpretation should prove that indigenous people have …

CanadaUnited NationsPharmaceutical ScienceTheftIndigenousStatute03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePopulation GroupsPolitical scienceDrug DiscoveryComparative lawHumansTreaty030304 developmental biologyPharmacology0303 health sciencesAustraliaDeclaration on the Rights of Indigenous PeoplesBiodiversityInternational lawIndigenous rightsUnited StatesComplementary and alternative medicine030220 oncology & carcinogenesisLawPersonal AutonomyIndians North AmericanMolecular MedicineMinority rightsNew ZealandPhytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology
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Broadcasting Indigenous Voices

2008

Ethnic minority media embody much of the multiculturalist, multilingual and transnational changes in the media landscape and in the wider societal frame as well. Often minority media aim at providing relevant information, but also alternative publicity and empowering experiences in regard to their own identity, language and culture. Through an analysis of journalists' interviews and ethnographic data, this article examines how these tendencies, possibilities and limitations are played out in the indigenous Sami media. The findings suggest that the Sami journalists have managed to provide an alternative public space and contribute to linguistic revitalization. Yet, working within translocal …

Communicationmedia_common.quotation_subjectEthnic groupMedia studiesIdentity (social science)Gender studiesLanguage and LinguisticsIndigenousPublic spaceBroadcasting (networking)MulticulturalismEthnographySociologyPublicitymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Communication
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Biopiracy versus One-World Medicine-From colonial relicts to global collaborative concepts.

2017

Abstract Background Practices of biopiracy to use genetic resources and indigenous knowledge by Western companies without benefit-sharing of those, who generated the traditional knowledge, can be understood as form of neocolonialism. Hypothesis The One-World Medicine concept attempts to merge the best of traditional medicine from developing countries and conventional Western medicine for the sake of patients around the globe. Study design Based on literature searches in several databases, a concept paper has been written. Legislative initiatives of the United Nations culminated in the Nagoya protocol aim to protect traditional knowledge and regulate benefit-sharing with indigenous communiti…

Complementary TherapiesQuality ControlInternational CooperationPopulationPharmaceutical ScienceTheftLegislationSelf MedicationColonialismIndigenousPatents as Topic03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDouble-Blind MethodPolitical scienceDrug DiscoveryHealth careHumansNagoya ProtocolEuropean UnionTraditional knowledgeeducationDeveloping Countries030304 developmental biologyPharmacology0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyEvidence-Based MedicinePlants Medicinalbusiness.industryEvidence-based medicineBiodiversityPublic relationsComplementary and alternative medicine030220 oncology & carcinogenesisNaturopathyMolecular MedicineIntegrative medicineMedicine TraditionalbusinessPhytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology
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Potential for cascading impacts of environmental change and policy on indigenous culture.

2022

AbstractGlobal environmental and societal changes threaten the cultures of indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLC). Despite the importance of IPLC worldviews and knowledge to sustaining human well-being and biodiversity, risks to these cultural resources are commonly neglected in environmental governance, in part because impacts can be indirect and therefore difficult to evaluate. Here, we investigate the connectivity of values associated with the relationship Ngātiwai (a New Zealand Māori tribe) have with their environment. We show that mapping the architecture of values-environment relationships enables assessment of how deep into culture the impacts of environmental change or pol…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesEcologyGeography Planning and Developmentlocal communitiesCulturepaikallisyhteisötluontoarvotmaoritGeneral MedicineBiodiversitycultural heritageluontosuhdeSocial Environmentenvironmental valueskulttuuriperintöEnvironmental Policysocial-ecological systemsKnowledgesosiaaliset verkostotnetworksEnvironmental ChemistryHumansalkuperäiskansatympäristönmuutoksetindigenous peoplesAmbio
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Indigenous language education in Russia: current issues and challenges

2021

Despite the high number of recognised Indigenous groups who are struggling to maintain their languages, cultures, and identities in Russia, there is little research done on the matters of cultural and linguistic revitalisation. This study sought to address this gap by exploring the views of two Indigenous groups, Karelian and Mari, on the development of their Indigenous languages and educational strategies to protect and revive their languages. The study relied on in-depth one-on-one interviews with 20 participants, ten from each Indigenous group. The findings show that despite older generations’ relative proficiency and interest in their respective Indigenous languages, motivation to maste…

Cultural Studies050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and Language05 social sciences050301 educationIndigenousEducationGlobalizationPlurilingualismUrban planningPolitical science0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSocial scienceIndigenous language0503 educationJournal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development
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The file on operation “Priboi”: A re-assessment of the mass deportations of 1949

2002

Abstract Using information from documents found in the Russian State Military Archives, this article discusses the organization and execution of the Soviet mass deportations from the Baltic States in March 1949 — code-named Operation “Priboi” by the USSR MVD. These findings are presented for the first time in English, in the context both of established historiographical interpretations and recent literature on the deportations. The aim is to encourage a scholarly reassessment of Operation “Priboi” as a crime against humanity perpetrated by the Soviet occupation regime, but supported by indigenous collaborators to a far greater degree than previously assumed.

Cultural StudiesArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)State (polity)Lawmedia_common.quotation_subjectHumanitySoviet occupationContext (language use)HistoriographySociologyIndigenousmedia_commonJournal of Baltic Studies
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