Abstract
Political ecology has expanded in multiple new directions since Piers Blaikie's explanation of the manifestations of political economy and ecology in the "problem" of soil erosion in the 1980s. In this article, I try to extend political ecology to engage with ethnic studies literature on coloniality, and indigenous perspectives on intergenerational trauma and healing. Drawing on historic and contemporary examples of Maidu governance and resource development in the Maidu homeland, California, USA, I extend the concept of intergenerational trauma in Native American communities from the individual and ethnic group levels to include the community's relationship with the land, and the concept of itself as a sovereign civic, governing body. I place specific manifestations of trauma, de-colonizing, and healing, as exemplified by Maidu natural resource activism, in dialogue with political ecology approaches to better understand the relationships between historically colonized people, governance, and land. I argue that the relationships between people and resources that political ecology focuses on cannot be adequately understood in historically colonized communities dealing with neo-colonial resource and political policies, without attention to perspectives on coloniality/de-coloniality, and trauma/healing. These perspectives come from both survivors of colonialism, and from ethnic studies and indigeneity scholars.Key words: political ecology, coloniality, Maidu, trauma, healing, Native American
Highlights
On June 29, 2004, the Pacific and Watershed Lands Stewardship Council convened a public meeting in Chester, California, in the northeastern Sierra Nevada mountains
Subaltern political ecology is border work, in the sense that Walter Mignolo talks of borderlands as a fertile meeting ground of ideas and identities.[99]
The ideas in this article emerged from several years of research and partnership with Maidu activists, and parallel, simultaneous engagement with scholars in ethnic studies, public health, and political ecology at the University of California, Berkeley and the University of California, Davis, USA
Summary
Elisabeth Middleton[1] University of California, Davis, USA. The concept of historical unresolved grief has powerful implications for healing from our past, but for giving us the strength and commitment to save ourselves and future generations.
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