10 research outputs found
Indigenous environmental values as human values
The claim that in natural resource management (NRM) a change from anthropocentric values and ethics to eco-centric ones is necessary to achieve sustainability leads to the search for eco-centric models of relationship with the environment. Indigenous cultures can provide such models; hence there is the need for multicultural societies to further include their values in NRM. In this article we investigate the environmental values placed on a freshwater environment of the Wet Tropics by a community of Indigenous Australians. We discuss their environmental values as human values, and so as beliefs that guide communities' understanding of how the natural world should be viewed and treated by humans. This perspective represents a step forward in our understanding of indigenous environmental values, and a way to overcome the paradigm of indigenous values as valued biophysical attributes of the environment or processes happening in landscapes. Our results show that the participant community holds biospheric values. Restoring these values in the natural resource management of the Wet Tropics could contribute to sustainability and environmental justice in the area
Experts' perspectives on the integration of Indigenous knowledge and science in Wet Tropics natural resource management
Aboriginal inhabitants of the Wet Tropics of Queensland advocate for greater inclusion of their Indigenous knowledge (IK) in natural resource management (NRM) to fulfil their customary obligations to country and to exert their Native Title rights. Despite a legal and institutional framework for inclusion of IK in NRM, IK has so far been applied only sporadically. We conducted an ethnographic case study to investigate perceptions on IK, science and how they affect integration of the two knowledge systems in the Wet Tropics. Our results show that IK and science are perceived as different concepts; that integration is limited by weak Indigenous internal and external governance; and that stronger Aboriginal governance and more focused engagement strategies are required to further the application of IK in local NRM. We conclude by arguing that NRM in the Wet Tropics needs to be reconceptualised to accommodate IK holistically, by considering its epistemology and the values and ethic that underpin it
Absence of sympathetic overactivity in Afro-Caribbean hypertensive subjects studied by heart rate variability
Black hypertensives present a greater prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy and an increased mortality compared to white hypertensives. Differences in sympathetic activity might contribute to explain these racial differences in hypertension. Nevertheless, previous laboratory studies did not show any increase of sympathetic activity direct to the heart in black subjects. The aim of the present study was to investigate the cardiac sympatho-vagal balance in black and white hypertensives analysing heart rate variability, during the entire 24 h. We analysed Holter recordings of 52 essential hypertensive patients, who had never received antihypertensive treatment, 26 of whom were black and 26 were white. Consecutive series of 300 beats, with 150 beats overlapped (approximately 600 series/day), were considered for the analysis in time and frequency domain. The mean 24-h value of the power of the low frequency spectral component (0.04-0.15 Hz), expressed in normalised units, ie a marker of sympathetic modulation, was significantly lower in the group of black patients compared to whites (respectively 40.0 +/- 2.1 vs 53.6 +/- 3.6 nu, P < 0.01). Similar results were observed for the LF/HF ratio, an index of the sympatho-vagal balance (respectively 4.11 +/- 0.58 vs 5.98 +/- 0.79; P < 0.05). In a multiple linear regression analysis, considering diastolic blood pressure, left ventricular mass index, race and age as independent variables, only race (P < 0.002) and age (P < 0.01) could independently predict the normalised low frequency power or the LF/HF ratio, as dependent variables. The results of this study suggest some blunting of the cardiac sympathetic neural modulation in black hypertensives compared to white hypertensives, during the entire 24 h