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The Ecologically Noble Savage Debate
Hames, Raymond
Annual review of anthropology, 2007-01, Vol.36 (1), p.177-190
[Periódico revisado por pares]
Palo Alto, CA: Annual Reviews
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Título:
The Ecologically Noble Savage Debate
Autor:
Hames, Raymond
Assuntos:
Anthropological analysis
;
Anthropological research
;
Anthropology
;
Biodiversity conservation
;
Case studies
;
Conservation
;
Conservation biology
;
Ecological sustainability
;
Economics
;
Environmental conservation
;
Ethnology
;
Habitat conservation
;
Human ecology
;
Human ecology, environment
;
Hunting
;
Hunting, fishing, gathering
;
Ideology
;
Indigenous peoples
;
Morphological source materials
;
Native Americans
;
Native peoples
;
Nature conservation
;
Nobility
;
Politics
;
Resource allocation
;
Sustainable agriculture
É parte de:
Annual review of anthropology, 2007-01, Vol.36 (1), p.177-190
Notas:
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
Descrição:
Debate around the ecologically noble savage represents two markedly different research threads. The first addresses the issue of conservation among native peoples and narrowly focuses on case studies of resource use of ethnographic, archaeological, or historic sources. The second thread is broader and more humanistic and political in orientation and considers the concept of ecological nobility in terms of identity, ecological knowledge, ideology, and the deployment of ecological nobility as a political tool by native peoples and conservation groups.
Editor:
Palo Alto, CA: Annual Reviews
Idioma:
Inglês
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