← Back to Events

Indigenous Climate Change Studies and Justice: Indigenizing Futures, Decolonizing the Anthropocene

RSVP5 people are attending

When

Monday, February 19, 2018
4:00 p.m.– 5:30 p.m. EST

Where

University of Michigan
435 State St
Tisch Hall - 1014
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
United States

Kyle WhyteKyle Whyte, Michigan State University professor discusses the interaction of multiple knowledges on climate change.

Indigenous peoples are creating an STS-related field to support their own capacities to address anthropogenic (human-caused) climate change. Indigenous studies often reflect the memories and realms of knowledge that arise from Indigenous peoples’ living heritages as societies with stories, lessons, and long histories of having to be well-organized to adapt to seasonal and inter-annual environmental changes. At the same time, our societies have been heavily disrupted by colonialism, capitalism, and industrialization. Through discussing the themes unique of Indigenous climate change studies, I will claim that Indigenous studies offer critical decolonizing approaches by which to address climate change and achieve climate justice. These approaches arise from how our ways of imagining the future so as to guide our present actions. The presentation will cover and integrate a range of topics, from the Dakota Access Pipeline to the Indigenous science movement to Indigenous science fiction imagination.

This lecture/discussion is open to the public.

5 people are attending

Will you come?

YOU CAN HELP NOW

Add your voice to those in
Michigan working for a stable climate

Get updates