Family Farming Knowledge Platform

Indigenous Peoples' Food Systems and Biocultural Heritage: Addressing Indigenous Priorities Using Decolonial and Interdisciplinary Research Approaches

The food systems and territories of Indigenous Peoples sustain much of the world’s biodiversity, cultivated and wild, through agroecological practices rooted in Indigenous cosmovision and cultural and spiritual values. These food systems have a critical role to play in sustainability transformations but are widely threatened and have received limited research attention.

This paper presents the results of four virtual workshops with Indigenous Peoples: a global workshop and local workshops with communities in coastal Kenya, northeast India and southwest China. Indigenous participants highlighted the role of their food systems in resilience to climate change, nutrition, sustainability and resilience to pandemics, and threats from agriculture, development and conservation policies. They called for research on the rapid loss of Indigenous knowledge; Indigenous Peoples’ land rights and food sovereignty; and the impacts of industrial agriculture on Indigenous food systems, stressing the need for decolonial approaches to revitalise Indigenous knowledge.

:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
Author: Krystyna Swiderska , Alejandro Argumedo , Chemuku Wekesa , Leila Ndalilo , Yiching Song , Ajay Rastogi , Philippa Ryan
:
Organization: MDPI AG
:
Year: 2022
:
:
:
Type: Journal
Full text available at: https://www.iied.org/21151x
Content language: English
:

Share this page