Publication | Open Access
Sacred land, mineral wealth, and biodiversity at Coronation Hill, Northern Australia: indigenous knowledge and SIA
28
Citations
17
References
2003
Year
Historical GeographyNative Environmental SovereigntyLand UseCultural HeritageSustainable DevelopmentLawArchaeologyIndigenous PeopleSocial Impact AssessmentIndigenous MovementEnvironmental PlanningSacred LandEnvironmental PolicySocial SciencesConservation PoliticsMineral WealthIndigenous KnowledgeIndigenous GovernanceLocal KnowledgePublic PolicyTraditional Ecological KnowledgeGeographyEnvironmental HistoryEnvironmental PoliticsIndigenous RightsEnvironmental ConflictLandscape ArchaeologyIndigenous Knowledge SystemsNorthern AustraliaAnthropology
This paper is concerned with the role of social impact assessment (SIA) in the resolution of an environmental conflict involving demands for the conservation of an ecologically significant area, a proposal to exploit mineral wealth, and the concerns of indigenous custodians who feared damage to sacred lands. This is a case in which the knowledge claims of key protagonists were deeply politicized and contested, and in which the process of decision-making was itself the subject of controversy and debate. The paper reviews the case, emphasizing the roles of western and indigenous epistemologies in decision- making. It presents an approach to SIA that addresses these epistemological issues and ensures the articulation of indigenous knowledge to governmental decision-makers.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1