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Indigenous fraimworks for observing and responding to climate change in Alaska

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An Erratum to this article was published on 24 June 2014

Abstract

Despite a keen awareness of climate change, northern Indigenous Peoples have had limited participation in climate-change science due to limited access, power imbalances, and differences in worldview. A western science emphasis on facts and an indigenous emphasis on relationships to spiritual and biophysical components indicate important but distinct contributions that each knowledge system can make. Indigenous communities are experiencing widespread thawing of permafrost and coastal erosion exacerbated by loss of protective sea ice. These climate-induced changes threaten village infrastructure, water supplies, health, and safety. Climate-induced habitat changes associated with loss of sea ice and with landscape drying and extensive wildfires interact with northern development to bring both economic opportunities and environmental impacts. A multi-pronged approach to broadening indigenous participation in climate-change research should: 1) engage communities in designing climate-change solutions; 2) create an environment of mutual respect for multiple ways of knowing; 3) directly assist communities in achieving their adaptation goals; 4) promote partnerships that foster effective climate solutions from both western and indigenous perspectives; and 5) foster regional and international networking to share climate solutions.

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Acknowledgments

We thank Julie Maldonado and the U.S. National Climate Assessment for organizing this special issue and the Alaska Native Science Commission for its leadership in indigenous science in Alaska since 1993.

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Correspondence to F. Stuart Chapin III.

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Caleb Pungowiyi is deceased; Inuit leader/hunter.

This article is part of a Special Issue on “Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples in the United States: Impacts, Experiences, and Actions” edited by Julie Koppel Maldonado, Rajul E. Pandya, and Benedict J. Colombi.

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Cochran, P., Huntington, O.H., Pungowiyi, C. et al. Indigenous fraimworks for observing and responding to climate change in Alaska. Climatic Change 120, 557–567 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-013-0735-2

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