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Meaningful Engagement in Climate Cha...
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Hotchkiss, Courtney Anne.
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Meaningful Engagement in Climate Change Adaptation Planning for Archaeological Sites/Traditional use Areas.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Meaningful Engagement in Climate Change Adaptation Planning for Archaeological Sites/Traditional use Areas./
作者:
Hotchkiss, Courtney Anne.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2023,
面頁冊數:
172 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-11, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International84-11B.
標題:
Native peoples. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30400549
ISBN:
9798379472429
Meaningful Engagement in Climate Change Adaptation Planning for Archaeological Sites/Traditional use Areas.
Hotchkiss, Courtney Anne.
Meaningful Engagement in Climate Change Adaptation Planning for Archaeological Sites/Traditional use Areas.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2023 - 172 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-11, Section: B.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--North Carolina State University, 2023.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
Archaeological sites-one type of cultural heritage-are important sources of information about human behavior, preferences, and values in the past (e.g., how humans have adapted to changing climate conditions), but they are also connected to living groups of people today. Yet, Tribal Nations and Native people face challenges to having their values, perspectives, and preferences included in site stewardship-including climate adaptation planning-when these traditional use areas are located on publicly managed land. Major hurdles that Tribal Nations, who have their own sovereign governments and a right to decide how their heritage is to be stewarded, face policies and institutional barriers in cultural resource management that are rooted in Western science. Archaeology will not be decolonized until Indigenous and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (ITEK) are treated as equal and woven into Western science in policy and practice guidance.This dissertation contributes to a larger project funded by the US National Park Service (NPS) to support climate change planning of archaeological sites by examining how local and Traditional stakeholder values and perspectives are being integrated into such efforts in the scholarly literature (study one) and within the NPS (study two), as well as critically reflecting on strategies for meaning collaboration between agency staff and citizens and staff of Tribal Nations and Native communities (study three). The systematic literature review (2014 - 2021) shows that there is a call to action to include ITEK in heritage site management, as well as an overall increase in climate change adaptation planning for archaeological sites; however, it is also documented that the values and perspectives of local and Traditional stakeholders are not consistently incorporated in adaptation planning efforts (study one). Semi-structured interviews with NPS staff (2020 - 2022) reveal a variety of barriers to working with associated Tribal Nations, but that stronger relationships with Tribal Nations are forming, the weaving of values and perspectives in climate change adaptation planning for archaeological sites is increasing, and optimism within agency staff for continued improvement is rising (study two). A critical reflection of a multi-modal approach to engaging with citizens and staff of Tribal Nations not only further documents institutional barriers and the challenge of epistemological differences in understanding the world, but also provides guidance for strategies, such as co-creating shared definitions and meanings of terms and terminology, for more meaningful engagement during climate adaptation planning and recommend pathways toward co-management of traditional use areas situated on federal land (study three). This dissertation emphasizes that climate change adaptation planning is an opportunity to decolonize archaeology and its related policy through the process of meaningful engagement and elevating ITEK.
ISBN: 9798379472429Subjects--Topical Terms:
3558955
Native peoples.
Meaningful Engagement in Climate Change Adaptation Planning for Archaeological Sites/Traditional use Areas.
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Archaeological sites-one type of cultural heritage-are important sources of information about human behavior, preferences, and values in the past (e.g., how humans have adapted to changing climate conditions), but they are also connected to living groups of people today. Yet, Tribal Nations and Native people face challenges to having their values, perspectives, and preferences included in site stewardship-including climate adaptation planning-when these traditional use areas are located on publicly managed land. Major hurdles that Tribal Nations, who have their own sovereign governments and a right to decide how their heritage is to be stewarded, face policies and institutional barriers in cultural resource management that are rooted in Western science. Archaeology will not be decolonized until Indigenous and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (ITEK) are treated as equal and woven into Western science in policy and practice guidance.This dissertation contributes to a larger project funded by the US National Park Service (NPS) to support climate change planning of archaeological sites by examining how local and Traditional stakeholder values and perspectives are being integrated into such efforts in the scholarly literature (study one) and within the NPS (study two), as well as critically reflecting on strategies for meaning collaboration between agency staff and citizens and staff of Tribal Nations and Native communities (study three). The systematic literature review (2014 - 2021) shows that there is a call to action to include ITEK in heritage site management, as well as an overall increase in climate change adaptation planning for archaeological sites; however, it is also documented that the values and perspectives of local and Traditional stakeholders are not consistently incorporated in adaptation planning efforts (study one). Semi-structured interviews with NPS staff (2020 - 2022) reveal a variety of barriers to working with associated Tribal Nations, but that stronger relationships with Tribal Nations are forming, the weaving of values and perspectives in climate change adaptation planning for archaeological sites is increasing, and optimism within agency staff for continued improvement is rising (study two). A critical reflection of a multi-modal approach to engaging with citizens and staff of Tribal Nations not only further documents institutional barriers and the challenge of epistemological differences in understanding the world, but also provides guidance for strategies, such as co-creating shared definitions and meanings of terms and terminology, for more meaningful engagement during climate adaptation planning and recommend pathways toward co-management of traditional use areas situated on federal land (study three). This dissertation emphasizes that climate change adaptation planning is an opportunity to decolonize archaeology and its related policy through the process of meaningful engagement and elevating ITEK.
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https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30400549
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