Contributed by Armando Medinaceli In the framework of the collaboration that exists between ISE and SOLAE (Sociedad Latinoamericana de Etnobiología), and as a follow up to a first joint session on ethics in 2010, a round table on “ethics, ethnobiology, and participatory research” was held at the III Latin American Society of Ethnobiology congress in La Paz, Bolivia (12 October 2012). The session was organized primarily by Sarah-lan Mathez...
Why are you asking our gyan (knowledge) and padhati (practice)?: Ethics and prior informed consent for research on traditional knowledge systems Contributed by Ranjay K. Singh1 This article presents practical guidelines for healthy and ethical collaborative research with traditional knowledge holders (TKHs) and local/traditional communities. Experience indicates that, in a majority of cases, research on indigenous knowledge or traditional...
Contributed by Olivia Sylvester * *This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from the International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, Canada. Information on the Centre is available on the web at www.idrc.ca; I was also supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada through a grant rewarded to Dr. Iain Davidson-Hunt. Why do youth use forest foods and medicines? This is a question I set out to answer during...
Contributed by Nemer E. Narchi During the year of 2007 I was walking down the streets of La Paz, Bolivia, as part of a group of anthropology students waiting for some others to arrive and go down to the Bolivian Amazon to learn field methods in anthropology as part of the Tsimane Amazonian Panel Study summer course. Walking on Cerro Cumbre, where the famous mercado de las brujas (the witchesʼ market) can be found, I saw something that sparked...
Contributed by Michelle Baumflek Medicinal plants and fungi play important roles in the health of Maliseet people from northern Maine, USA. A critical aspect of health sovereignty for this community is being able to locate and have access to these plants. Commercial development on their traditional gathering sites and restricted access to privately owned lands limit the ability of the Maliseet to gather medicinal plants. Habitat modeling can...