Challenges (Oct 2020)

Indigenous Natural and First Law in Planetary Health

  • Nicole Redvers,
  • Anne Poelina,
  • Clinton Schultz,
  • Daniel M. Kobei,
  • Cicilia Githaiga,
  • Marlikka Perdrisat,
  • Donald Prince,
  • Be’sha Blondin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/challe11020029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 29

Abstract

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Indigenous Peoples associate their own laws with the laws of the natural world, which are formally known as or translated as Natural or First Law. These laws come from the Creator and the Land through our ancestral stories and therefore, they are sacred. All aspects of life and existence depend on living and following these natural First Laws. Since colonization, Indigenous Peoples’ Natural Laws have been forcibly replaced by modern-day laws that do not take into account the sacred relationship between the Earth and all of her inhabitants. The force of societies who live outside of Natural Law has ensured the modern-day consequences of not living in balance with nature. Pandemics and global environmental change, including climate change, are all consequences of not following the Natural Laws that are encapsulated by the interconnected nature of the universe. Here we discuss Natural Law from an Indigenous paradigm and worldview which carries implications for planetary health and wider environmental movements around the globe.

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