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Gone the Bull of Winter?: Grappling with the Cultural Implications of and Anthropology's Role(s) in Global Climate Change

Because global climate change is intimately linked to culture, anthropologists are strategically well‐placed to interpret it, communicate information about it, and act in response to it both in the field and at home. Fieldworkers are increasingly encountering reports of the local effects of climate...

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Published in:Current anthropology 2008-08, Vol.49 (4), p.569-595
Main Author: Crate, by Susan A.
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Language:English
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description Because global climate change is intimately linked to culture, anthropologists are strategically well‐placed to interpret it, communicate information about it, and act in response to it both in the field and at home. Fieldworkers are increasingly encountering reports of the local effects of climate change from their research partners, and it is becoming apparent that indigenous peoples' recognized capacity for adaptation to change may not be sufficient to cope with these effects. Fieldwork among Viliui Sakha of northeastern Siberia suggests an action‐oriented approach to anthropological climate change research that begins by developing cultural models of the local effects of global climate change, goes on to fill in the gaps with Western scientific knowledge, and ends with the dissemination of that information and its use for the development of adaptive strategies, policy recommendations, and advocacy.
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); University of Chicago Press Journals (Full run); JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Academic discipline
Action Research
Adaptation to change
Anthropology
Anthropology, Cultural
Climate Change
Climate change adaptation
Climate models
Cold Climate
Communities
Environment
Field work
Fieldwork
Global climate models
Greenhouse Effect
History of medicine and histology
Humans
Indigenous populations
International community
Local Culture
Local Knowledge
Observational research
Siberia
Social Anthropology
Summer
Viliui Sakha
Villages
Winter
title Gone the Bull of Winter?: Grappling with the Cultural Implications of and Anthropology's Role(s) in Global Climate Change
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