2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8373.2010.01422.x
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Ways of seeing environmental change: Participatory research engagement in Yunnan, China, with ethnic minority Hani participants

Abstract: In this article, I reflect on a participatory learning and action (PLA) and participatory geographic information system (PGIS) project undertaken in two adjacent Hani villages in southern Yunnan, China. After a lengthy process to gain research authorisations, Hani villagers worked with a group of visiting researchers (Hani, Han Chinese and New Zealanders) to articulate local visions of land-use change and environmental challenges. PLA exercises produced a diverse range of hand-made and PGIS products over a 10… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Other approaches to environmental issues in comparable situations have used participatory learning and action (PLA) effectively (Terry and Khatri 2009;McKinnon 2010).…”
Section: Traditional Decisionmakingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other approaches to environmental issues in comparable situations have used participatory learning and action (PLA) effectively (Terry and Khatri 2009;McKinnon 2010).…”
Section: Traditional Decisionmakingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This relatively highly priced spice requires comparatively little labour or fertiliser compared to many other upland crops -important factors that explain the growing popularity of black cardamom cultivation in recent decades among ethnic minority farmers who have access to the appropriate forests. In southeast Yunnan, where cardamom was previously gathered from the forest for household use, cardamom is now a notable non-timber forest product cultivated as a cash crop (McKinnon, 2011). Similarly, in the northern upland provinces of Vietnam, residents historically used cardamom for a variety of purposes, including cooking and the treatment of ailments, both for people and for their prized water buffalo.…”
Section: Black Cardamommentioning
confidence: 99%