Climate Change, Food, and ‘Sharing’ among the Iñupiat of Wainwright, Alaska

 
 

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Course(s)

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Overview

Indigenous peoples living in high Arctic environments have developed sophisticated ecological and social relationships with the animals, plants, and inanimate objects that define their complex and dynamic habitat. These relations are integral to maintaining subsistence livelihoods, such as hunting and gathering, which are based on dynamic traditions that have enabled them to adapt to social and environmental change. Although indigenous peoples of the Arctic have contributed little to the causes of climate change, they are among the first to feel its effects.

 

Course Materials

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 2011-12-01
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 2011-12-01
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 2012-02-02
 
 
 

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