Journal article

KNOWLEDGE AND EVALUATION OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN TRADITIONAL SOCIETIES OF NEPAL


Authors listMULLERBOKER, U

Publication year1991

Pages101-114

JournalMountain Research and Development

Volume number11

Issue number2

ISSN0276-4741

Open access statusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.2307/3673570

PublisherInternational Mountain Society (IMS)


Abstract
In the interpretation of ecological relations problems of understanding frequently occur between scientists or experts educated in the West and the local population. As a basis for ecologically sound environmental planning, one that does not bypass the needs of the population, the ways the environment is preceived and evaluated must therefore also be elucidated. A line of research that sets itself the task of analyzing ethnospecific knowledge of the environment and the resulting behavior of traditional societies can be set within the context of geographical "man-environment" concepts, as well as within "studies in ethnoscience," in particular ethnoecological and classificatory approaches. Two examples of knowledge and evaluation of the natural environment are presented in the following: 1) The soils in Gorkha from the perspective of the local population (Middle Hills of Nepal); II) Knowledge and evaluation of the environment among the Chitawan Tharus: the example of the forests and grasslands (Rapti Dun, Churia Range). 1



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleMULLERBOKER, U. (1991) KNOWLEDGE AND EVALUATION OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN TRADITIONAL SOCIETIES OF NEPAL, Mountain Research and Development, 11(2), pp. 101-114. https://doi.org/10.2307/3673570

APA Citation styleMULLERBOKER, U. (1991). KNOWLEDGE AND EVALUATION OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN TRADITIONAL SOCIETIES OF NEPAL. Mountain Research and Development. 11(2), 101-114. https://doi.org/10.2307/3673570


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