Local knowledge and memory in biodiversity conservation
TR Number
Date
2006
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Palo Alto, Ca.: Annual Reviews
Abstract
For the past two decades, biodiversity conservation has been an area of concerted action and spirited debate. Given the centrality of biodiversity to the earth's life support system, its increasing vulnerability is being addressed in international conservation as well as in research by anthropologists and other social scientists on the cultural, economic, political, and legal aspects of human engagement with biological resources. The concepts of biodiversity as a social construct and historical discourse, of local knowledge as loaded representation and invented tradition, and of cultural memory as selective reconstruction and collective political consciousness have also been the foci of recent critical reflection.
Description
Metadata only record
Keywords
Local knowledge, Biodiversity, Biodiversity conservation, Cultural memory, Anthropology, Social construct, Culture, Indigenous knowledge, Ethnoecology
Citation
Annual Review of Anthropology 35: 317-335