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E-grāmata: Indigenous Practice and Community-Led Climate Change Solutions: The Relevance of Traditional Cosmic Knowledge Systems

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This book centers Indigenous knowledge and practice in community-led climate change solutions.



This book centers Indigenous knowledge and practice in community-led climate change solutions.

This book will be one of the first academic books to use the consciousness framework to examine and explain humans' situatedness and role in maintaining ecosystems' health. Drawing on teachings from the Indigenous Adi-Shaiva community, the authors present up-to-date research on meanings and implications of South Asian traditional cosmic knowledge, which focuses on relationality and spirituality connected to climate change. This knowledge can create climate change solutions in areas including land, water, traditional management, sustainability goals and expectations, and state development projects. Overall, this book provides an innovative framework for non-violent climate solutions, which has its foundations in a traditional cosmic and consciousness-based context.

Bridging the gap between Indigenous and Western perspectives by re-educating researchers and decolonizing popular climate change solutions, this book will be of great interest students and scholars of climate change, conservation, environmental anthropology, and Indigenous studies more broadly.

Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2: Decolonizing Positionality

Chapter
3. Consciousness Framework

Chapter
4. Methodology

Chapter
5. Antiquity and Scientific Legitimacy of Consciousness Framework for Climate Change

Chapter
6. The Value of Sarvajnapeeta in Handling Climate Change

Chapter
7. Charyapada - Significance of the Lifestyle in Climate Change

Chapter
8. Hyper-specialization as a Cure for Climate Change

Chapter
9. Operationalizing Consciousness Framework for Achieving Climate Change Solutions

Chapter
10. Role of Colonization and Neo-Colonization on Climate Change

Chapter
11. Protecting Traditional Land-based Conscious Traditions for our future.

References

Index

Rani Muthukrishnan, Ph.D., Director of Research Compliance, Texas A&M University, San Antonio, Texas, USA. Ranis research interests include consciousness science and diversity of divine feminine manifestation based on the Vedagama tradition, human-nature interaction, nature-culture intersection, childrens cognition of nature, advocating for women's roles in relation to nature, culture, and sustainability, and impact of climate change on biodiversity.

Ranjan Datta, Ph.D., Canada Research Chair in Community Disaster Research at Indigenous Studies, Department of Humanities, Mount Royal University, Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Ranjans research interests include advocating for Indigenous environmental sustainabilities, responsibilities for decolonial research, Indigenous water and energy justice, critical anti-racist climate change resilience, and cross-cultural community research.