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Resource Conservation and Sustainable Development: Anthropology’s Contribution

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Resource Conservation and Sustainable Development: Anthropology’s Contribution
Author(s)Quiatt, Duane; Koester, Stephen
AbstractAnthropologists offer a crucial information base for resource conservation and habitat preservation. They have unique access to local knowledge, and the ability to share it globally. A cultural group’s well-being is tied to its local environment, making the latter of vital interest to anthropologists, just as biologists and animal scientists are concerned about deterioration in their subjects’ environment. Anthropologists must make resource conservation and sustainable development more central among their concerns and missions, as they are anthropological problems of great immediacy.
IssueNo2
Pages139-141
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceResearch & Exploration
VolumeNo10
PubDateSpring 1994
ISBN_ISSN8755-724X
Browse Path(s)Anthropology
—-Social/Cultural Anthropology
——–Ecology and Resource Conservation

Social/Cultural Anthropology

  • Colonization and Post-Colonialism
  • Culture
  • Culture Change
  • Ecology and Resource Conservation
  • Ethics, Morality, and Culture
  • Family, Marriage, and Kinship
  • Gender
  • Health and Medical Anthropology
  • Media and Technology
  • Migration, Displacement, and Resettlement
  • Political Practices, Organization, and Structure
  • Religion
  • Social Organization, Identity and Segregation
  • Society, Civilization, and Culture
  • Subsistence and Economic Practices, Organization, and Structure
  • Traditional and Tribal Societies
  • War, Violence, and Hegemony
  • Westernization and Modernity
  • Work and Alternative Livelihoods


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