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Indigenous perspectives for strengthening social responses to global environmental changes [electronic resource] : A response to the social work grand challenge on environmental change /

by Billiot, Shanondora; Beltrán, Ramona; Brown, Danica; Mitchell, Felicia M; Fernandez, Angela.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleDescription: pp. 296-316.Subject(s): Traditional ecological knowledge, social work grand challenges, Indigenous social work, environmental justiceOnline resources: Click here to access full-text article In: Journal of community practice 2019, Vol. 27, No. 3-4Summary: The “Grand Challenges for Social Work,” is a call to action for innovative responses to society’s most pressing social problems. In this article, we respond to the “Grand Challenge” of Creating Social Responses to a Changing Environment from our perspective as Indigenous scholars. Over the last several decades, diminishing natural resources, pollution, over-consumption, and the exploitation of the natural environment have led to climate change events that disproportionately affect Indigenous peoples. We present how environmental changes impact Indigenous peoples and suggest culturally relevant responses for working with Indigenous communities. We propose a decolonizing cyclical, iterative process grounded in Indigenous Ways of Knowing.
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The “Grand Challenges for Social Work,” is a call to action for innovative responses to society’s most pressing social problems. In this article, we respond to the “Grand Challenge” of Creating Social Responses to a Changing Environment from our perspective as Indigenous scholars. Over the last several decades, diminishing natural resources, pollution, over-consumption, and the exploitation of the natural environment have led to climate change events that disproportionately affect Indigenous peoples. We present how environmental changes impact Indigenous peoples and suggest culturally relevant responses for working with Indigenous communities. We propose a decolonizing cyclical, iterative process grounded in Indigenous Ways of Knowing.

Mode of access: Internet.


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