Maak een oefenexamen van de volgende tekst: The authors want to contribute to more inclusive definitions of sustainability, it can be more inclusive than it already is
Very rich linguistic, cultural and biological diversity is situated in indigenous peoples areas, which is why this knowledge can be added in the conceptualisation of sustainability
In pioneering works, conceptualisation of a notion of sustainability among indigenous groups is often overlooked
Key messages:
- The SDG's cannot and should not be taken as universal due to conceptual and moral differences among different communities and people, especially among indigenous peoples.
- There are different cultural and socio-philosophical experiences included in the process of sociality
- The economy cannot be separated from 'the environment'
- Understanding how local interconnections are sustained and reproduced, both for humans and non-humans require informed policy mechanisms and new forms of evidence
- Alternative strategies and other views on sustainability are needed in the current climate emergency
Environmental impacts caused by Indigenous groups are in most cases less impactful
A characteristic for Indigenous theories of constructing sustainability and communal well-being is that they draw from contextualizing ones healthy relations with other humans and other-than-human beings, rather than considering them as independent entities.
Indigenous theories into sustainability science is increasing significantly in political and academic circles
Integrating Indigenous points of view and knowledge of sustainability, Indigenous governance, self-determination and sovereignity must be taken into consideration
Indigenous regulatory governance and customary legal structures are in issue of international human rights law and issues related to climate change
It can be argued that certain climate change issues arose because Indigenous peoples were being oppressed
Collaboration and Cooperation are needed to incorporate Indigenous methodologies into projects
As it is not easy to detach knowledge from the environment in which it is produced and to what it is connected, Indigenous knowledge should be regarded as a process, where communities become empowered through selfconfidence, derived from their own knowledge, to inform development interventions which directly affect them in their everyday lives
New practices, such as alternative paradigms and designs, can help create an ecologically and socially more just world and they allow for measuring and crafting the quality of life differently
Sustaining Indigenous languages involves maintaining and promoting new and old communicative practices
When considering issues of 'sustainability' and language practices, we must first think of multiple relations comprised in language practices. Do these have a long-standing history or have they recently emerged?
Notions of health and health practices also need to be addressed when addressing issues of 'sustainability', because they affect sociality and relationality with the human and nonhuman dimensions of life
Long-standing Indigenous practices can work together with 'Western' medical practices, though they are often thought of as to be in opposition
Sustaining these practices means that appreciating the domains that each of the tradition covers and relying on their strengths
Indigenous approaches to sustainability and development emphasize place and locality, relationships and sacred exchanges, where the quality of life is measured and adjusted to meet the needs of the human-non-human community and future generations.
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