The Cultural Context of Biodiversity Conservation: Seen and Unseen Dimensions of Indigenous Knowledge among Q'eqchi' Communities in Guatemala
How are biological diversity, protected areas, indigenous knowledge and religious worldviews related? From an anthropological perspective, this book provides an introduction into the complex subject of conservation policies that cannot be addressed without recognising the encompassing relationship between discursive, political, economic, social and ecological facets. By facing these interdependencies across global, national and local dynamics, it draws on an ethnographic case study among Maya-Q'eqchi' communities living in the margins of protected areas in Guatemala. In documenting the cultural aspects of landscape, the study explores the coherence of diverse expressions of indigenous knowledge. It intends to remind of cultural values and beliefs closely tied to subsistence activities and ritual practices that define local perceptions of the natural environment. The basic idea is to illustrate that there are different ways of knowing and reasoning, seeing and endowing the world with meaning, which include visible material and invisible interpretative understandings. These tend to be underestimated issues in international debates and may provide an alternative approach upon which conservation initiatives responsive to the needs of the humans involved should be based on.
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The Cultural Context of Biodiversity Conservation: Seen and Unseen Dimensions of Indigenous Knowledge among Q'eqchi' Communities in Guatemala
How are biological diversity, protected areas, indigenous knowledge and religious worldviews related? From an anthropological perspective, this book provides an introduction into the complex subject of conservation policies that cannot be addressed without recognising the encompassing relationship between discursive, political, economic, social and ecological facets. By facing these interdependencies across global, national and local dynamics, it draws on an ethnographic case study among Maya-Q'eqchi' communities living in the margins of protected areas in Guatemala. In documenting the cultural aspects of landscape, the study explores the coherence of diverse expressions of indigenous knowledge. It intends to remind of cultural values and beliefs closely tied to subsistence activities and ritual practices that define local perceptions of the natural environment. The basic idea is to illustrate that there are different ways of knowing and reasoning, seeing and endowing the world with meaning, which include visible material and invisible interpretative understandings. These tend to be underestimated issues in international debates and may provide an alternative approach upon which conservation initiatives responsive to the needs of the humans involved should be based on.
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The Cultural Context of Biodiversity Conservation: Seen and Unseen Dimensions of Indigenous Knowledge among Q'eqchi' Communities in Guatemala

The Cultural Context of Biodiversity Conservation: Seen and Unseen Dimensions of Indigenous Knowledge among Q'eqchi' Communities in Guatemala

by Petra Maass
The Cultural Context of Biodiversity Conservation: Seen and Unseen Dimensions of Indigenous Knowledge among Q'eqchi' Communities in Guatemala

The Cultural Context of Biodiversity Conservation: Seen and Unseen Dimensions of Indigenous Knowledge among Q'eqchi' Communities in Guatemala

by Petra Maass

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Overview

How are biological diversity, protected areas, indigenous knowledge and religious worldviews related? From an anthropological perspective, this book provides an introduction into the complex subject of conservation policies that cannot be addressed without recognising the encompassing relationship between discursive, political, economic, social and ecological facets. By facing these interdependencies across global, national and local dynamics, it draws on an ethnographic case study among Maya-Q'eqchi' communities living in the margins of protected areas in Guatemala. In documenting the cultural aspects of landscape, the study explores the coherence of diverse expressions of indigenous knowledge. It intends to remind of cultural values and beliefs closely tied to subsistence activities and ritual practices that define local perceptions of the natural environment. The basic idea is to illustrate that there are different ways of knowing and reasoning, seeing and endowing the world with meaning, which include visible material and invisible interpretative understandings. These tend to be underestimated issues in international debates and may provide an alternative approach upon which conservation initiatives responsive to the needs of the humans involved should be based on.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781935603351
Publisher: University of Akron Press, The
Publication date: 10/15/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 283
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Petra Maass was a researcher at the Institute for Cultural and Social Anthropology at the University of Goettingen, Germany.
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