This insight episode comes from full episode seventy-nine with Courtney Carothers.
Courtney is a professor in the college of Fisheries and Oceans at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
Courtney talks with Michael about the importance of indigenous expertise and knowledge systems in maintaining fisheries, and how multiple ways of knowing and understanding the land allows for a deeper relationship with the environment that must be valued when thinking about sustainable fisheries management.
Talk by Jessica Black, Courtney Carothers, and Janessa Esquible on Indigenizing Fisheries: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=448tr90KUWQ
109: Forests as pathways to prosperity with Daniel Miller
108: Localizing development with Esther Zeledon
107: Zoning policy with William Fischel
Insight Episode #44: Derek Kauneckis on watersheds and smart tech
106: The Surrounds with AbdouMaliq Simone
105: The Rights of Nature with Julia Talbot-Jones
IJC#9: Magical realism, water and power with Valentina Fonseca Cepeda
IJC#8: Blockchain networks as knowledge commons with Ilia Murtazashvili
Insight Episode #43: Hillary Angelo on social imaginaries
104: Creating Knowledge for Change with Sharachchandra Lele
103: Gathering tides with Mehana Blaich Vaughan
Insight Episode #42: Graeme Cumming on scale mismatch and mismanagement
IJC#7: Sacred groves (or commons with a difference) with Samuel Adeyanju
Insight Episode #41: Sara Meerow on the concept of resilience
102: Rights for Rivers with Erin O’Donnell
Insight Episode #40: Bridie McGreavy on the importance of indigenous perspectives in Maine shellfish fisheries
102: Environmental economics and conservation with Priya Shyamsundar
101: Commoning with David Bollier
100: Our 100th episode!
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Poetry of Science
Behavioral Grooves Podcast
Hidden Brain
Proxy with Yowei Shaw
The Science of Happiness