Inuit perceptions of climate change in East Greenland

Author:

Buijs Cunera1

Affiliation:

1. National Museum of Ethnology, 2300 AE, Leiden, Netherlands

Abstract

Global warming and climate change are important topics of debate in Greenland. This paper examines how the Tunumiit of East Greenland perceive the weather, the changing climate, and the local environment. It also discusses how their perceptions have been influenced by political debates on global warming, sustainable development, and wildlife management since the 1950s. In the past, if some animal species disappeared from a specific area, or if the weather turned bad, the Tunumiit would attribute this misfortune to human transgressions of rules of respect. Today, they often connect the increasingly unpredictable weather to their reduced access to natural resources and greater difficulties in travelling. Some hunters speak of a shift from seal hunting to cod fishing in East Greenland, although fishing is still perceived as a vulnerable source of income with low status. Nowadays, older methods of navigation and orientation coexist with such new technologies as GPS and mobile telephones. Some local hunters and villagers feel unfairly accused of increases in CO2 emissions and pollution from their motorboats and generators. Tunumiit hunting communities are facing increasing uncertainty on all levels of their existence, and their hunters are turning to the growing tourism industry—a side effect of global warming—and other coping strategies to maintain their local subsistence activities and to reinforce their own culture.

Publisher

Consortium Erudit

Subject

General Social Sciences,General Arts and Humanities

Reference30 articles.

1. APORTA, Claudio, 2005 From map to horizon; from trail to journey: Documenting Inuit geographic knowledge, Études/Inuit/Studies, 29(1-2): 221-231.

2. BERKES, Fikret and Dyanna JOLLY, 2001 Adaptation to Climate Change: Social-Ecological Resilience in a Canadian Western Arctic Community, Conservation Ecology, 5(2) (online at: http:// www.consecol.org/vol5/iss2/art18).

3. BOX, Jason, E., 2002 Survey of Greenland instrumental temperature records: 1873-2001, International Journal of Climatology, 22(15): 1829-1847.

4. BUIJS, Cunera, 2004 Furs and Fabrics. Transformation, Clothing and Identity in East Greenland, Leiden, Research School CNWS, School of Asian, African and Amerindian Studies, CNWS Publications, Mededelingen van het Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde, 32.

5. BUIJS, Cunera and Aartjan NOOTER, 1987 Skindboykottens konsekvenser for et fangersamfund i Østgrønland (‘The consequences of a sealskin boycott for a hunting community in East Greenland’), unpublished report translated into Danish by Bente Straatman-Cortsen.

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