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Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
Within and beyond Turtle Island, many Indigenous communities emphasize the importance of relational care with our more-than-human kin, including (Grand)mother Earth and her biomes and fauna. However, several traditional practices have been threatened, stolen, and extinguished due to colonial policies that limit or forbid relational care. In answering the call of Kari Marie Norgaard and James V. Fenelon (Standing Rock Lakota/Dakota) “Toward an Indigenous Environmental Sociology”, this session investigates these relationalities and the sacred practices of Indigenous Peoples as stewards of our/their ancestral and current lands. Of particular emphasis is the challenges of these practices during historical and present colonization, and the futurities of Indigenous ecologies and environmentalisms as part of Indigenous sovereignties.
An Indigenous Relational Meaning of Food System, One to Challenge the Dominant Meaning - Daniel Yuhasz, University of Missouri-Columbia
Fire Policies and Indigenous Rights Across Mexico, Central and South America - Kathleen M. Fallon, Stony Brook University; Kajol Patel, Stony Brook University; Merica Griffin, Stony Brook University
Living with the Carbon in Forest? Indigenous Environmental Justice and Carbon Sink Governance in Taiwan - Chun-Ching Tu, Rutgers University
Meanings of the Environment: Indigenous Peoples in the Marianas Pacific and Kichi Zibi Region - Chelsea King, Harvard University; Michèle Lamont, Harvard University
What Fire Came Here to Do: Indigenous Burning, Multispecies Recognition, and Anticolonial Worldmaking in California - Ghaleb Attrache, University of California-Berkeley