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    Architects of abundance: indigenous regenerative food and land management systems and the excavation of hidden history

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    Author
    Johnston, Lyla June
    Chair
    Black, Jessica
    Cajete, Gregory
    Committee
    Nelson, Melissa
    Collin, Yvette Running Horse
    Hum, Richard
    Keyword
    Traditional ecological knowledge
    Sustainable agriculture
    Organic farming
    Indigenous peoples
    Agriculture
    Natural resources
    Food
    Land use
    Sustainable living
    Human ecology
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11122/13122
    Abstract
    Pre-Columbian and contemporary Indigenous Nations of North and South America (hereafter referred to as Turtle Island and Abya Yala) have managed ecosystems extensively to produce prolific and predictable food systems for themselves and non-humans, whom they often view as relatives. The elements of earth, water, fire, and air are explored to analyze Indigenous soil management, Indigenous aquaculture, Indigenous pyrogenic land management, and Indigenous oral histories, respectively. First, a review of four Indigenous societies and their soil management techniques revealed that none of these systems require outside fertilizer or irrigation to sustain ecocentric food systems on millennial scales. Second, a comparative analysis of six Indigenous fisheries showed how these communities operate on regional-scales, manually augment habitat for key species, are thousands of years old, and are driven by value systems rooted in reciprocity, reverence, respect, restraint, and responsibility to homeland. Third, an in-depth analysis of fire regime data from a variety of sources indicates that Diné and Pueblo Ancestors did indeed manage the Ch'ooshgai (Chuska) Mountain Range with routine burning during the Holocene epoch and negates theories that these fire regimes were due to lightning ignition. Fourth, a synthesis of interviews with four contemporary Indigenous land managers confirms that these cultural groups were and are active managers of local ecosystems. Despite coming from different places, all interviewees are driven by a similar set of principles: reverence for the sacredness of life, non-humans are the equal and sacred relatives of humans, and a belief that human groups are divinely assigned to care for their respective homelands. The next chapter offers an articulation of a theory of Indigenous Regenerative Ecosystem Design (IRED) to support the field and outline potential avenues for future research. The eighth chapter offers policy recommendations based on successful Indigenous food systems for federal, tribal, and nongovernmental agencies to help us effectively address the social and environmental challenges of our times. The ninth chapter proposes that the extent and sophistication of Indigenous food systems were minimized in the historical record precisely because they are living contradictions to the narratives used to legitimize land seizure and attempted genocide. Overall, it was found that most traditional Indigenous communities are not passive observers of nature but are instead influential facilitators of landscape scale abundance, rooted in an ethic of kinship and reverence.
    Description
    Dissertation (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2022
    Table of Contents
    1. General introduction -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Chapter overview -- 1.3. A note on terminology and capitalization -- 1.4. Kincentric ecology and indigenous ecocentrism -- 1.5. Researcher background -- 1.6. Conclusion --1.7. References. 2. Earth: indigenous soil management systems and their lessons for today -- 2.1. Abstract -- 2.2. Introduction -- 2.3. A:shiwi soils: Zuni floodwater farming -- 2.4. Fire, bamboo, and the rich soils of the pre-columbian southeast -- 2.5. Biological and praxis diversity: Mebêngôkre soil innovation -- 2.6. The grass burning moon: indigenous soil management of prairie ecosystems -- 2.7. Discussion -- 2.8. Conclusion -- 2.9. References -- 2.10. Figures. 3. Water: aquaculture of indigenous nations past and present -- 3.1. Abstract -- 3.2. Introduction -- 3.3. The building blocks of a food system: principles, values, goals, strategies, and characteristics -- 3.4. Ancient clam gardens of the Pacific Northwest -- 3.5. Bauré aquatic farms of the Bolivian Amazon -- 3.6. Haíłzaqv construction of herring spawning grounds -- 3.7. Gunditjmara eel fishery of Tae Rak, Victoria, Australia -- 3.8. Pre-Columbian oyster fisheries in the Chesapeake Bay -- 3.9. Chumash fishery of the Channel Islands, Southern California -- 3.10. The reconstruction of Chumash fishery principles, values, and goals based on creation stories and cultural narratives -- 3.11. Synthesis -- 3.12. Discussion -- 3.13. Conclusion -- 3.14. References -- 3.15. Figures -- 3.16. Tables. 4. Fire: holocene anthropogenic burning in the Ch'ooshgai (Chuska) Mountains -- 4.1. Abstract -- 4.2. Introduction -- 4.3. Fire as nourisher of the land -- 4.4. Methodology -- 4.5. Ethnographic accounts of Diné anthropogenic fire -- 4.6. Journal entries: "park-like" structure of early Ch'ooshgai Mountains -- 4.7. Tree ring data: fire regime collapse correlates with the collapse of diné traditional ecological knowledge -- 4.8. Fossilized charcoal: an abrupt appearance of fire activity 4,200 cal BP -- 4.9. Neighboring nations: the fire practices of Ndé and Puebloan nations -- 4.10. Who did the burning? -- 4.11. Diné-Puebloan cultural intermixing -- 4.12. Discussion -- 4.13. Conclusion -- 4.14. References -- 4.15. Figures. 5. Air: Honoring indigenous voices -- 5.1. Abstract -- 5.2. Introduction -- 5.3. Methodology -- 5.4. Interview 1: An Amah Mutsun coastal prairie food system in Northern California -- 5.5. Interview 2: Diné (Navajo) alluvial farming and high desert ecosystem design -- 5.6. Interview 3: A Maskoke view on food and land systems management -- 5.7. Interview 4: Pomo perspectives on Mediterranean ecosystems management -- 5.8. Interview analysis -- 5.9. Conclusion -- 5.10. References -- 5.11. Figures -- 5.12. Tables. 6. Toward a theory of indigenous regenerative ecosystem design (IRED) -- 6.1. Abstract -- 6.2. Introduction -- 6.3. Toward a theory of indigenous regenerative ecosystem design -- 6.4. Patterns in indigenous regenerative ecosystem design (IRED) -- 6.5. Why "indigenous regenerative ecosystem design"? -- 6.6. The heart of IRED -- 6.7. Future research in IRED -- 6.8. Conclusion -- 6.9. References -- 6.10. Figures. 7. Policy: food security and land management in the 21st century -- 7.1. Executive summary -- 7.2. Methodology -- 7.3. Recommendations -- 7.4. Conclusion -- 7.5. References. 8. Colonial erasure of indigenous food and land management history -- 8.1. Abstract -- 8.2. Introduction -- 8.3. "Cultural supremacism" as an ancient justification for land seizure -- 8.4. The aftermath of conquest -- 8.5. Indigenous people of Turtle Island become targets of dehumanization -- 8.6. Indigenous land management histories eclipsed to uphold colonial narratives -- 8.7. Conflicting definitions of cultural progression/regression -- 8.8. Conclusion -- 8.9. References. 9. General conclusion -- 9.1. Earth: lessons from indigenous soil management -- 9.2. Water: lessons from sustainable indigenous aquaculture -- 9.3. Fire: Diné and Pueblo pyro-management of the Ch'ooshgai mountains -- 9.4. Air: honoring the voices of contemporary indigenous land managers -- 9.5. Theory: indigenous regenerative ecosystem design -- 9.6. Policy: solving global problems, restoring indigenous leadership -- 9.7. Why indigenous ecological histories are hidden -- 9.8. Conclusion -- Appendices.
    Date
    2022-12
    Type
    Dissertation
    Collections
    Indigenous Studies

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