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Study protocol: International joint research project ‘climate change resilience of Indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (RISE)

BACKGROUND: Anthropogenic changes in the environment are increasingly threatening the sustainability of socioecological systems on a global scale. As stewards of the natural capital of over a quarter of the world’s surface area, Indigenous Peoples (IPs), are at the frontline of these changes. Indige...

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Autores principales: García Molinos, Jorge, Gavrilyeva, Tuyara, Joompa, Pattamaporn, Narita, Daiju, Chotiboriboon, Sinee, Parilova, Varvara, Sirisai, Solot, Okhlopkov, Innokentiy, Zhang, Zhixin, Yakovleva, Natalia, Kongpunya, Prapa, Gowachirapant, Sueppong, Gabyshev, Viacheslav, Kriengsinyos, Wantanee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9302735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35862396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271792
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author García Molinos, Jorge
Gavrilyeva, Tuyara
Joompa, Pattamaporn
Narita, Daiju
Chotiboriboon, Sinee
Parilova, Varvara
Sirisai, Solot
Okhlopkov, Innokentiy
Zhang, Zhixin
Yakovleva, Natalia
Kongpunya, Prapa
Gowachirapant, Sueppong
Gabyshev, Viacheslav
Kriengsinyos, Wantanee
author_facet García Molinos, Jorge
Gavrilyeva, Tuyara
Joompa, Pattamaporn
Narita, Daiju
Chotiboriboon, Sinee
Parilova, Varvara
Sirisai, Solot
Okhlopkov, Innokentiy
Zhang, Zhixin
Yakovleva, Natalia
Kongpunya, Prapa
Gowachirapant, Sueppong
Gabyshev, Viacheslav
Kriengsinyos, Wantanee
author_sort García Molinos, Jorge
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Anthropogenic changes in the environment are increasingly threatening the sustainability of socioecological systems on a global scale. As stewards of the natural capital of over a quarter of the world’s surface area, Indigenous Peoples (IPs), are at the frontline of these changes. Indigenous socioecological systems (ISES) are particularly exposed and sensitive to exogenous changes because of the intimate bounds of IPs with nature. Traditional food systems (TFS) represent one of the most prominent components of ISES, providing not only diverse and nutritious food but also critical socioeconomic, cultural, and spiritual assets. However, a proper understanding of how future climate change may compromise TFS through alterations of related human-nature interactions is still lacking. Climate change resilience of indigenous socioecological systems (RISE) is a new joint international project that aims to fill this gap in knowledge. METHODS AND DESIGN: RISE will use a comparative case study approach coupling on-site socioeconomic, nutritional, and ecological surveys of the target ISES of Sakha (Republic of Sakha, Russian Federation) and Karen (Kanchanaburi, Thailand) people with statistical models projecting future changes in the distribution and composition of traditional food species under contrasting climate change scenarios. The results presented as alternative narratives of future climate change impacts on TFS will be integrated into a risk assessment framework to explore potential vulnerabilities of ISES operating through altered TFS, and possible adaptation options through stakeholder consultation so that lessons learned can be applied in practice. DISCUSSION: By undertaking a comprehensive analysis of the socioeconomic and nutritional contributions of TFS toward the sustainability of ISES and projecting future changes under alternative climate change scenarios, RISE is strategically designed to deliver novel and robust science that will contribute towards the integration of Indigenous issues within climate change and sustainable agendas while generating a forum for discussion among Indigenous communities and relevant stakeholders. Its goal is to promote positive co-management and regional development through sustainability and climate change adaptation.
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spelling pubmed-93027352022-07-22 Study protocol: International joint research project ‘climate change resilience of Indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (RISE) García Molinos, Jorge Gavrilyeva, Tuyara Joompa, Pattamaporn Narita, Daiju Chotiboriboon, Sinee Parilova, Varvara Sirisai, Solot Okhlopkov, Innokentiy Zhang, Zhixin Yakovleva, Natalia Kongpunya, Prapa Gowachirapant, Sueppong Gabyshev, Viacheslav Kriengsinyos, Wantanee PLoS One Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Anthropogenic changes in the environment are increasingly threatening the sustainability of socioecological systems on a global scale. As stewards of the natural capital of over a quarter of the world’s surface area, Indigenous Peoples (IPs), are at the frontline of these changes. Indigenous socioecological systems (ISES) are particularly exposed and sensitive to exogenous changes because of the intimate bounds of IPs with nature. Traditional food systems (TFS) represent one of the most prominent components of ISES, providing not only diverse and nutritious food but also critical socioeconomic, cultural, and spiritual assets. However, a proper understanding of how future climate change may compromise TFS through alterations of related human-nature interactions is still lacking. Climate change resilience of indigenous socioecological systems (RISE) is a new joint international project that aims to fill this gap in knowledge. METHODS AND DESIGN: RISE will use a comparative case study approach coupling on-site socioeconomic, nutritional, and ecological surveys of the target ISES of Sakha (Republic of Sakha, Russian Federation) and Karen (Kanchanaburi, Thailand) people with statistical models projecting future changes in the distribution and composition of traditional food species under contrasting climate change scenarios. The results presented as alternative narratives of future climate change impacts on TFS will be integrated into a risk assessment framework to explore potential vulnerabilities of ISES operating through altered TFS, and possible adaptation options through stakeholder consultation so that lessons learned can be applied in practice. DISCUSSION: By undertaking a comprehensive analysis of the socioeconomic and nutritional contributions of TFS toward the sustainability of ISES and projecting future changes under alternative climate change scenarios, RISE is strategically designed to deliver novel and robust science that will contribute towards the integration of Indigenous issues within climate change and sustainable agendas while generating a forum for discussion among Indigenous communities and relevant stakeholders. Its goal is to promote positive co-management and regional development through sustainability and climate change adaptation. Public Library of Science 2022-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9302735/ /pubmed/35862396 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271792 Text en © 2022 García Molinos et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
García Molinos, Jorge
Gavrilyeva, Tuyara
Joompa, Pattamaporn
Narita, Daiju
Chotiboriboon, Sinee
Parilova, Varvara
Sirisai, Solot
Okhlopkov, Innokentiy
Zhang, Zhixin
Yakovleva, Natalia
Kongpunya, Prapa
Gowachirapant, Sueppong
Gabyshev, Viacheslav
Kriengsinyos, Wantanee
Study protocol: International joint research project ‘climate change resilience of Indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (RISE)
title Study protocol: International joint research project ‘climate change resilience of Indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (RISE)
title_full Study protocol: International joint research project ‘climate change resilience of Indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (RISE)
title_fullStr Study protocol: International joint research project ‘climate change resilience of Indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (RISE)
title_full_unstemmed Study protocol: International joint research project ‘climate change resilience of Indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (RISE)
title_short Study protocol: International joint research project ‘climate change resilience of Indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (RISE)
title_sort study protocol: international joint research project ‘climate change resilience of indigenous socioecological systemsʼ (rise)
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9302735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35862396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271792
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