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Richard Howitt
Researcher at Macquarie University
Publications - 99
Citations - 3524
Richard Howitt is an academic researcher from Macquarie University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Indigenous & Indigenous rights. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 99 publications receiving 3167 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard Howitt include University of Sydney.
Papers
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Scale as relation: musical metaphors of geographical scale
TL;DR: In this article, the implications of the metaphors conventionally used to think and write about scale are considered, and some musical metaphors of geographical scale are used to sketch out the importance of scale as a relation.
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Rethinking the building blocks: ontological pluralism and the idea of ‘management’
TL;DR: The persistence of indigenous ontologies rooted in human systems that pre-date the creation of colonial property rights and assertions of frontier conquest and dispossession unsettles the United States as mentioned in this paper.
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Weaving Indigenous and sustainability sciences to diversify our methods
Jay T. Johnson,Richard Howitt,Gregory A. Cajete,Fikret Berkes,Renee Pualani Louis,Andrew Kliskey +5 more
TL;DR: Indigenous and sustainability sciences have much to offer one another regarding the identification of techniques and methods for sustaining resilient landscapes as discussed by the authors, and it is evident that some Indigenous peoples have maintained distinct systematic, localized, and place-based environmental knowledge over extended time periods.
Book
Rethinking Resource Management: Justice, Sustainability and Indigenous Peoples
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the complexity in resource management systems: conceptualizing abstractions and internal relations, beyond "Negotiation", re-thinking conceptual building blocks, reading landscapes, Cartesian Geographies or Places of the Heart.
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Indigenous geographies I: Mere resource conflicts? The complexities in Indigenous land and environmental claims
TL;DR: The authors review three debates through which human geographers are beginning to engage more meaningfully with Indigenous environmentalism: the political ecology of neoliberalism, deliberation within claims settlement, and propertization of socio-ecological relations.