2019
DOI: 10.24815/ijdm.v2i1.13503
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The Integration of Indigenous Knowledge for Disaster Risk Reduction Practices through Scientific Knowledge: Cases from Mentawai Islands, Indonesia

Abstract: This study explores the importance of indigenous knowledge for everyday practices of disaster risk reduction and response. Many existing studies have highlighted the need to integrate such knowledge with modern science. Based on ethnographic research in indigenous communities in the Mentawai Islands of Indonesia, this study explores the categorization of indigenous knowledge in the integration process. To that end, primary data were collected through in-depth interviews while secondary data were collected from… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…In other words, mitigation procedures for the Covid-19 disease disaster are carried out by integrating local knowledge and Western scientific knowledge, which is considered appropriate with current conditions. Some studies cross-culture in the world also show that it is important to integrate local knowledge and Western scientific knowledge for natural resource management and the environment or disaster mitigation [5,21,28,29,45,46,56]. Therefore, multi-disciplinary and interdisciplinary studies, such as ethnobiology and ethnoecology, are important to do intensively, because the results are important for the development of science and practical results can be used to support the sustainable development programs, such as conservation of nature, adaptive agricultural development to various environmental changes, and management of infectious diseases [28].…”
Section: Traditional Management Of Infectious Diseasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, mitigation procedures for the Covid-19 disease disaster are carried out by integrating local knowledge and Western scientific knowledge, which is considered appropriate with current conditions. Some studies cross-culture in the world also show that it is important to integrate local knowledge and Western scientific knowledge for natural resource management and the environment or disaster mitigation [5,21,28,29,45,46,56]. Therefore, multi-disciplinary and interdisciplinary studies, such as ethnobiology and ethnoecology, are important to do intensively, because the results are important for the development of science and practical results can be used to support the sustainable development programs, such as conservation of nature, adaptive agricultural development to various environmental changes, and management of infectious diseases [28].…”
Section: Traditional Management Of Infectious Diseasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies on the role of TEK in relation to risk management and reduction as well as the response to disasters, including climate changes and cross-culture around the world, have been performed by different researchers worldwide (Hop et al 2017;Rai and Kawas 2019;Zulfadrim et al 2019;Hosen et al 2020;Magalhaes et al 2021;Sekaranom et al 2021). However, studies on the cultural strategies of the different cultural backgrounds in dealing with disasters have rarely been undertaken.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Japan, the significance of indigenous/local knowledge in disaster risk reduction was emphasized by scholars related to different disaster events during past decades. For example, a story is told and believed to have been handed down by an ancestor who lived in the Sanriku region of Japan, a tsunami-prone area that saved many lives in the Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011 (Zulfadrim et al 2019). These phenomena describe how local knowledge is vital in disaster risk reduction among communities applying local knowledge to prevent disastrous events.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%