| Literature DB >> 31721066 |
Terry V Callaghan1,2, Olga Kulikova3,4,5, Lidia Rakhmanova6,3, Elmer Topp-Jørgensen7, Niklas Labba8, Lars-Anders Kuhmanen9, Sergey Kirpotin3, Olga Shaduyko3, Henry Burgess10, Arja Rautio11, Ruth S Hindshaw12, Leonid L Golubyatnikov13, Gareth J Marshall10, Andrey Lobanov14, Andrey Soromotin15, Alexander Sokolov16,17, Natalia Sokolova16,17, Praskovia Filant18, Margareta Johansson19.
Abstract
The Circumpolar North has been changing rapidly within the last decades, and the socioeconomic systems of the Eurasian Arctic and Siberia in particular have displayed the most dramatic changes. Here, anthropogenic drivers of environmental change such as migration and industrialization are added to climate-induced changes in the natural environment such as permafrost thawing and increased frequency of extreme events. Understanding and adapting to both types of changes are important to local and indigenous peoples in the Arctic and for the wider global community due to transboundary connectivity. As local and indigenous peoples, decision-makers and scientists perceive changes and impacts differently and often fail to communicate efficiently to respond to changes adequately, we convened a meeting of the three groups in Salekhard in 2017. The outcomes of the meeting include perceptions of how the three groups each perceive the main issues affecting health and well-being and recommendations for working together better.Entities:
Keywords: Dialogue; Environmental change; Indigenous peoples; Policy-makers; Researchers; Siberia
Year: 2019 PMID: 31721066 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01277-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129