Frontiers in Earth Science (Oct 2024)

Addressing the Anthropocene from the Global South: integrating paleoecology, archaeology and traditional knowledge for COP engagement

  • ECHOES,
  • Verónica Zuccarelli Freire,
  • Michael J. Ziegler,
  • Michael J. Ziegler,
  • Victor Caetano-Andrade,
  • Victor Iminjili,
  • Rebecca Lellau,
  • Freg Stokes,
  • Rachel C. Rudd,
  • Danielle Heberle Viegas,
  • S. Yoshi Maezumi,
  • Gopesh Jha,
  • Gopesh Jha,
  • Mariya Antonosyan,
  • Deepak Kumar Jha,
  • Deepak Kumar Jha,
  • Ricarda Winkelmann,
  • Patrick Roberts,
  • Patrick Roberts,
  • Patrick Roberts,
  • Patrick Roberts,
  • Laura Furquim,
  • Laura Furquim,
  • ECHOES,
  • Laura Furquim,
  • Mariya Antonosyan,
  • Deepak K. Jha,
  • Patrick Roberts,
  • Veronica Zucarelli Freire,
  • Danielle Viegas,
  • Freg Stokes,
  • Victor Iminjili,
  • Gopesh Jha,
  • Michael Ziegler,
  • Rachel Rudd,
  • Victor Andrade,
  • Yoshi Maezumi,
  • Rebecca Lellau

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2024.1470577
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

The triple planetary crisis of climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss necessitates more holistic, comprehensive, and integrated public policy approaches. Within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, this crisis highlights significant conflicts over forms of knowledge and conceptualization, affecting how international policies are formed. Indigenous knowledge systems have become increasingly acknowledged for their vital role in addressing the challenges of the Anthropocene. Conferences of the Parties institutions like the International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate Change emphasize the critical, although not always recognized, importance of Indigenous territories, which contain eighty percent of the world’s biodiversity. Here, we show that research in paleoecology, archaeology and history demonstrates the long-term significance of traditional knowledge and Indigenous land management practices for contemporary ecosystem dynamics. Drawing from these varied studies and perspectives also reveal the socio-economic inequalities resulting from centuries of European colonialism. We showcase three case studies on; (i) pastoralism in eastern Africa, (ii) natural resource management in southeast Asia and (iii) adaptation to sea level rise in the Caribbean, which touch upon highly diverse human resilience strategies across space and time. Despite efforts at the COP28 to accelerate climate action and incorporate diverse knowledge systems, significant challenges remain. The need for a pluralistic knowledge, rather than a one-size-fits-all approach, blending scientific language with artistic and narrative forms, is proposed as critical for fostering effective communication and developing more effective and equitable solutions for global environmental governance.

Keywords