TY - JOUR
T1 - Ethnobiology Phase VI
T2 - Decolonizing Institutions, Projects, and Scholarship
AU - McAlvay, Alex C.
AU - Armstrong, Chelsey G.
AU - Baker, Janelle
AU - Elk, Linda Black
AU - Bosco, Samantha
AU - Hanazaki, Natalia
AU - Joseph, Leigh
AU - Martínez-Cruz, Tania Eulalia
AU - Nesbitt, Mark
AU - Palmer, Meredith Alberta
AU - Priprá De Almeida, Walderes Cocta
AU - Anderson, Jane
AU - Asfaw, Zemede
AU - Borokini, Israel T.
AU - Cano-Contreras, Eréndira Juanita
AU - Hoyte, Simon
AU - Hudson, Maui
AU - Ladio, Ana H.
AU - Odonne, Guillaume
AU - Peter, Sonia
AU - Rashford, John
AU - Wall, Jeffrey
AU - Wolverton, Steve
AU - Vandebroek, Ina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Society of Ethnobiology. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/7/1
Y1 - 2021/7/1
N2 - Abstract. Ethnobiology, like many fields, was shaped by early Western imperial efforts to colonize people and lands around the world and extract natural resources. Those legacies and practices persist today and continue to influence the institutions ethnobiologists are a part of, how they carry out research, and their personal beliefs and actions. Various authors have previously outlined five overlapping "phases" of ethnobiology. Here, we argue that ethnobiology should move toward a sixth phase in which scholars and practitioners must actively challenge colonialism, racism, and oppressive structures embedded within their institutions, projects, and themselves. As an international group of ethnobiologists and scholars from allied fields, we identified key topics and priorities at three levels: At the institutional scale, we argue for repatriation/rematriation of biocultural heritage, accessibility of published work, and realignment of priorities to support community-driven research. At the level of projects, we emphasize the need for mutual dialogue, reciprocity, community research self-sufficiency, and research questions that support sovereignty of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities over lands and waters. Finally, for individual scholars, we support self-reflection on language use, co-Authorship, and implicit bias. We advocate for concrete actions at each of these levels to move the field further toward social justice, antiracism, and decolonization.
AB - Abstract. Ethnobiology, like many fields, was shaped by early Western imperial efforts to colonize people and lands around the world and extract natural resources. Those legacies and practices persist today and continue to influence the institutions ethnobiologists are a part of, how they carry out research, and their personal beliefs and actions. Various authors have previously outlined five overlapping "phases" of ethnobiology. Here, we argue that ethnobiology should move toward a sixth phase in which scholars and practitioners must actively challenge colonialism, racism, and oppressive structures embedded within their institutions, projects, and themselves. As an international group of ethnobiologists and scholars from allied fields, we identified key topics and priorities at three levels: At the institutional scale, we argue for repatriation/rematriation of biocultural heritage, accessibility of published work, and realignment of priorities to support community-driven research. At the level of projects, we emphasize the need for mutual dialogue, reciprocity, community research self-sufficiency, and research questions that support sovereignty of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities over lands and waters. Finally, for individual scholars, we support self-reflection on language use, co-Authorship, and implicit bias. We advocate for concrete actions at each of these levels to move the field further toward social justice, antiracism, and decolonization.
KW - antiracism
KW - colonialism
KW - ethics
KW - parachute science
KW - social justice
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85114055417&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85114055417&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2993/0278-0771-41.2.170
DO - 10.2993/0278-0771-41.2.170
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85114055417
SN - 0278-0771
VL - 41
SP - 170
EP - 191
JO - Journal of Ethnobiology
JF - Journal of Ethnobiology
IS - 2
ER -