Abstract

Sustainable water use and management has become an important issue globally and in Taiwan during this era of climate change. In search of a paradigm shift, this grounded theory paper investigates the traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) of a Rukai Indigenous community in Taiwan to unearth its core values and core practices related to sustainability, as its people have been living near the headwaters in the mountain area for generations. Six Elders from the community were interviewed, and the findings show that the Rukai TEK of water is guided by taboos, a social mechanism keeping the human-nature balance, which are ingrained in four core values (prevention of water contamination, group sharing, conservation of the sources of life, and adherence to the laws of nature). These core values are reflected in the five core practices of water use, including calakebe (spring), drakerale (streams), drapulu (ivy fishing), wakaruru (water diversion), and wadrele (water monitoring). These core values and practices contribute to the sustainable environment and livelihood of the Rukai community. This study proposes that positioning Indigenous TEK as the subjectivity of sustainability provides important implications for the sustainable management of natural resources, as well as Indigenous education for sustainable development.

Highlights

  • Accepted: 3 February 2022With the rise in environmental awareness in the 1970s, the concept of sustainable development gained increasing international attention

  • Rukai traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) of water is the process that actualizes the “balance” in water resources and use natural resources, because they believe that resources on the earth are limited

  • The grounded theory findings show that the Rukai TEK of water included core practices calakebe, drakerale, drapulu, wakaruru, and wadrele, core values, and the balancing agent of tawlrisiane

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Summary

Introduction

With the rise in environmental awareness in the 1970s, the concept of sustainable development gained increasing international attention. As people began to recognize climate changes and disasters wrought by development activities [1], they started to understand the importance of considering the interactions and tensions among society, economy, and ecology, and constructing indices for sustainable development [2]. Taiwan is ranked as the eighteenth water-scarce country in the world according to the Water Conservancy Agency of the Ministry of Economic Affairs of Taiwan [5].

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