2016
DOI: 10.1080/23311886.2016.1185811
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Indigenous environmental values as human values

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Cited by 42 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The desire to achieve an ecosystem that is "natural" has epistemological flaws. The idea of "pristine nature" is a colonial idea that disregards Indigenous land management in markedly transforming the landscape (Denevan 1992, Gratani et al 2016. The concept of nature, land use, and Indigenous land justice are bound up in the politics of territorialization, which shapes norms and rules for legitimating land access and use (Sletto 2016, Welch and.…”
Section: Concept #5: Desired State Of Ecosystem: Ifm Can Achieve a Rementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The desire to achieve an ecosystem that is "natural" has epistemological flaws. The idea of "pristine nature" is a colonial idea that disregards Indigenous land management in markedly transforming the landscape (Denevan 1992, Gratani et al 2016. The concept of nature, land use, and Indigenous land justice are bound up in the politics of territorialization, which shapes norms and rules for legitimating land access and use (Sletto 2016, Welch and.…”
Section: Concept #5: Desired State Of Ecosystem: Ifm Can Achieve a Rementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Schwartz defined values as desirable, trans‐situational goals, which vary in importance and serve as guiding principles in human life. Schwartz's model of 10 values is described as a comprehensive, cross‐culturally stable model that can predict series of external constructs (González‐Rodríguez et al, 2016; Gross & Dewaele, 2017), which has been validated across 80 countries and cultures and therefore is well‐established (Gratani, Sutton, Butler, Bohensky, & Foale, 2016). When compared to other value measures, Schwartz's Human Value scale has the advantage of focusing on universal values that are recognized throughout all major cultures, which makes the value scale suitable for cross‐national and cultural analysis (Schwartz, 1992; Weckroth & Kemppainen, 2016).…”
Section: Literature Review and Hypotheses Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, the worldviews, values, and systems that underpin the colonization of Indigenous peoples are also at the root of environmental changes that threaten local and global ecosystems (60). Modern Western societies are underpinned by anthropocentric understandings of the world and individualistic values, and tend to associate consumption with improvements in quality of life (61). The resulting capitalist systems have driven the commodification and exploitation of natural resources, with societies pursuing economic growth while externalizing the negative environmental impacts (62).…”
Section: Health Impacts Of Climate Changementioning
confidence: 99%