Ecology and Society (Mar 2023)

Getting back to that point of balance: Indigenous environmental justice and the California Indian Basketweavers’ Association

  • John R. Oberholzer Dent,
  • Carolyn Smith,
  • M. Cristina Gonzales,
  • Alice B. Lincoln-Cook

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-13674-280114
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 1
p. 14

Abstract

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Emerging theories of Indigenous environmental justice reframe environmental problems and solutions using Indigenous onto-epistemologies, emphasizing the agency of non-human relations and influence of colonialism. The California Indian Basketweavers’ Association (CIBA) embodies this paradigm in its work to expand access to gathering areas, revitalize cultural burning, and stop pesticide use. Through our different positionalities as CIBA members, California Indian basketweavers, and researchers, we construct a case study of Indigenous environmental justice that articulates environmental stewardship as intrinsically linked with cultural and spiritual practice. Through education, information sharing, relationship building, lobbying, and collective action among its membership and land management agencies, CIBA has expanded basketweavers’ access to safe and successful gathering. By sustaining millennia of tradition, CIBA builds Indigenous sovereignty and shifts California’s land management paradigm toward environmental justice and global survival.

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