nr |
titel |
auteur |
tijdschrift |
jaar |
jaarg. |
afl. |
pagina('s) |
type |
1 |
About the editor
|
Sioui, Miguel |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. v |
artikel |
2 |
Contested waters, extractivisms, and territories: Indigenous people in Chile and the neoliberal crisis
|
Romero-Toledo, Hugo |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 189-208 |
artikel |
3 |
Contributors
|
|
|
|
4 |
C |
p. xi-xii |
artikel |
4 |
Copyright
|
|
|
|
4 |
C |
p. iv |
artikel |
5 |
From the muddy banks of the Watu: The Krenak and the Rio Doce mining disaster in Brazil ☆ ☆ We thank the Research Foundation of Minas Gerais—FAPEMIG—for supporting the research in which this chapter was based.
|
Zhouri, Andréa |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 145-165 |
artikel |
6 |
Front Matter
|
|
|
|
4 |
C |
p. ii |
artikel |
7 |
“Guides of water”: Indigenous water justice and pastoral management beyond adaptation to climate change
|
Yates, Julian S. |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 167-187 |
artikel |
8 |
Haudenosaunee women's water law: Reclaiming the sacred
|
Sioui, Miguel |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 63-89 |
artikel |
9 |
Hydro-social cohesion in Iranian local communities
|
Labbaf Khaneiki, Majid |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 243-266 |
artikel |
10 |
Index
|
|
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 337-339 |
artikel |
11 |
Indigenous community engagement at Scotty Creek, Northwest Territories, Canada: Experiences and lessons learned
|
Quinton, William |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 309-323 |
artikel |
12 |
Indigenous knowledge, mercury, and a remote Russian Indigenous river basin—Ponoi River
|
Mustonen, Tero |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 299-307 |
artikel |
13 |
Indigenous knowledge perspectives on water management and its challenges in South Africa
|
Ncube, Bongani |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 227-242 |
artikel |
14 |
Indigenous Knowledge Systems for the management of the Barotse Flood Plain in Zambia and their implications for policy and practice in the developing world
|
Mapedza, Everisto |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 209-225 |
artikel |
15 |
Introduction: The need for Indigenous knowledge-based water and drought policy in a changing world
|
Sioui, Miguel |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 1-11 |
artikel |
16 |
Lessons learned and concluding reflections on indigenous relationships with water and our Eatenonha (Earth Mother)
|
Sioui, Miguel |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 325-336 |
artikel |
17 |
Rapua ngā tohu (seeking the signs)—Indigenous knowledge-informed climate adaptation
|
Harcourt, N. |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 267-297 |
artikel |
18 |
Reasserting Traditional Knowledge across a fragmented governance landscape: The Mackenzie River Basin
|
Latta, Alex |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 41-61 |
artikel |
19 |
Rights to water and water's rights: Plural water governances in mining contexts of Colombia and Peru
|
Ulloa, Astrid |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 127-144 |
artikel |
20 |
Striving toward reconciliation through the co-creation of water research
|
Martin-Hill, Dawn |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 13-40 |
artikel |
21 |
The evolving relationship between Maya communities and subterranean waters in the Yucatan Peninsula
|
Smith, Derek A. |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 109-125 |
artikel |
22 |
“We had to Jump Over, but We’re Still Here”: Nimiipúu spatio-temporalities of water and fish in times of climate change
|
Cohn, Teresa Cavazos |
|
|
4 |
C |
p. 91-108 |
artikel |