TY - JOUR
T1 - Situating indigenous resilience
T2 - climate change and tayal’s “millet ark” action in Taiwan
AU - Lin, Yih Ren
AU - Tomi, Pagung
AU - Huang, Hsinya
AU - Lin, Chia Hua
AU - Chen, Ysanne
N1 - Funding Information:
Pagung’s initiative of recovering millets has gained support from a small grant of Ministry of Culture as well as collaboration from the universities. Over the years, one plot of land has grown up to ten plots and become a significant landscape of millets in the village. Attracted by the landscape, more villagers came to serve as volunteers, especially the older women. They revealed stories about millets. Story-telling then becomes a common way of life when there are significant rituals held for millets such as seeding or harvesting. These stories include villagers’ collective memory and knowledge related to millets. It also constitutes and reconnects the relations of the villagers to their traditions surrounding the land and their ancestors.
Funding Information:
Funding: This research was partially funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, grant 109-2420-H-038-001-MY3, “Social Economy and Indigenous Community Resilient Livelihood: A Case Study of Three Communities in Back Mountain of Jienshi District, Hsinchu County”.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/12/2
Y1 - 2020/12/2
N2 - Whereas indigenous people are on the frontlines of global environmental challenges such as climate change, biodiversity loss, and numerous other forms of critical planetary deterioration, the indigenous experiences, responses, and cultural practices have been underestimated in the mainstream frameworks of environmental studies. This paper aims to articulate a meaningful response to recent calls to indigenous and local knowledge on food as a source of resilience in the face of global climate change. By retrieving the values and practices indigenous people of Taiwan, specifically Tayal women, associate with human and non-human ecologies, our collaborative work with the indigenous community explores indigenous resilience and its relevance to indigenous cultural knowledge and global environmental concerns. Pivoting on the “Millet Ark” action, a Tayal conservation initiative of the bio-cultural diversity of millets, this study revolves around issues of how Tayal communities adapt to the climate change, how to reclaim their voice, heritage, knowledge, place, and land through food, and how to narrate indigenous “counter-stories” of resilience and sustainability. The cultural narrative of “Millet Ark” investigates indigenous way of preserving millet bio-cultural diversity and restoring the land and community heritage, inquiring into how Tayal people are adaptive and resilient to change and therefore sustainable through the cultural and social life of millets.
AB - Whereas indigenous people are on the frontlines of global environmental challenges such as climate change, biodiversity loss, and numerous other forms of critical planetary deterioration, the indigenous experiences, responses, and cultural practices have been underestimated in the mainstream frameworks of environmental studies. This paper aims to articulate a meaningful response to recent calls to indigenous and local knowledge on food as a source of resilience in the face of global climate change. By retrieving the values and practices indigenous people of Taiwan, specifically Tayal women, associate with human and non-human ecologies, our collaborative work with the indigenous community explores indigenous resilience and its relevance to indigenous cultural knowledge and global environmental concerns. Pivoting on the “Millet Ark” action, a Tayal conservation initiative of the bio-cultural diversity of millets, this study revolves around issues of how Tayal communities adapt to the climate change, how to reclaim their voice, heritage, knowledge, place, and land through food, and how to narrate indigenous “counter-stories” of resilience and sustainability. The cultural narrative of “Millet Ark” investigates indigenous way of preserving millet bio-cultural diversity and restoring the land and community heritage, inquiring into how Tayal people are adaptive and resilient to change and therefore sustainable through the cultural and social life of millets.
KW - Adaptation
KW - Bio-cultural diversity
KW - Climate action
KW - Indigenous and local knowledge
KW - Indigenous food sovereignty
KW - Millet varieties
KW - Resilience
KW - Sustainability
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U2 - 10.3390/su122410676
DO - 10.3390/su122410676
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85098321244
SN - 2071-1050
VL - 12
SP - 1
EP - 22
JO - Sustainability (Switzerland)
JF - Sustainability (Switzerland)
IS - 24
M1 - 10676
ER -