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April 2007 - The Inuit of the Arctic can
no longer hunt safely as the ice is breaking up around them.
Pacific Islanders are losing coral atolls beneath rising seas.
Caribbean islanders are battered by violent storms. Tribes in
Borneo watch as their rainforests catch fire. Tibetans wonder
why their sacred glaciers are melting and why the alpine
medicinal plants are disappearing.
The threat of climate change to the world's indigenous peoples
was under the spotlight April 12 and 13 at an international
symposium at Oxford University.
Participants agreed that communication among indigenous
peoples and with scientists and policymakers is critical in
adapting to the climate changes already underway and averting
the worst consequences of global warming.
Visiting Fellow at Oxford University Dr. Jan Salick, host of
the Oxford Indigenous People's Symposium, said, "Both
ethnoecological researchers and indigenous people themselves
need to network and initiate comparable climate change
research and action."
"Indigenous peoples must be integrated into discussions of
climate change and policy formation," he said.
Two Inuit men test thickness of the ice in the Canadian
Arctic.
Scientists presented new research on the impacts of climate
change on the indigenous Peoples of the Pacific, Southeast
Asia, the Himalayas, North America, South America, Africa and
Europe where they depend directly on natural resources
threatened by global warming.
The recent climate change summary report from the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC, only
mentioned "detrimental impacts ... to traditional indigenous
ways of life' in the Polar regions."
Yet according to the symposium organizers from Oxford's
Environmental Change Institute, "Indigenous Peoples are in the
immediate frontline of vulnerability to climate change.
"Although they have a global geographic spread and broad
cultural diversity, there is a risk that the international
climate change forum has lost sight of the immense collective
danger they face," the organizers said.
Pablo Eyzaguirre from Bioversity International, an
international agricultural research center, said, "Indigenous
and traditional communities should be supported in their
unique adaptation to marginal areas and ecosystem boundaries.
We need to respect ecosystem buffers that also provide
livelihoods, sacred spaces, and pathways for traditional
peoples."
The symposium's opening session consisted of a general
overview of climate change impacts and implications on the
global scale. Director of the Environmental Change Institute,
Professor Diana Liverman reviewed recent publications, such as
the Stern and IPCC reports, global, British and EU policy
developments, and initiatives developed by non-state actors
such as corporations, cities and nongovernmental
organizations.
Bedouins travel across Senegal's burning sands.
Presentaters stressed the multifaceted nature of climate
changes, not only in the wide variety of impacts, but also in
the interplay with other processes such as inter-annual
variation, habitat fragmentation, loss of biodiversity,
disempowerment, insecurity, and lack of understanding.
Recurrent topics were the role that indigenous and local
peoples play in maintaining and strengthening the resilience
of healthy ecosystems, as well as the spiritual, emotional and
moral implications of climate changes to local peoples.
Many indigenous peoples are showing how resourceful they are
in applying their traditional knowledge to create strategies
for lessening the impacts of natural disasters.
Some use strips of mangrove forest to absorb the force of
tidal surges and tsunamis, others apply genetic diversity in
crops to avoid total crop failure, and some communities
migrate among habitats as disaster strikes, participants
heard.
The symposium ended with a continuing planning session on
conjoined research and action for and by indigenous and local
peoples to afford them more prominence in the international
climate change discussion and action.
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