Decolonizing conservation? Indigenous resurgence and buffalo restoration in the American West

Author:

Schneider Lindsey1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Colorado State University, USA

Abstract

There has been a recent surge of interest in “decolonizing” conservation and natural resource management fields. Most of this scholarship, however, speaks to colonialism on a global scale and does not address conservation within modern settler colonial states such as the United States and Canada. This project focuses on the reintroduction of buffalo (bison) in the American West as an example of how even conservation efforts that purport to include, value, and share Indigenous perspectives can ultimately uphold settler colonial relations of power. Using an Indigenous mixed-methodology approach, it interrogates the discursive construction of buffalo as “America's great conservation success story” and highlights the ways in which conservation has historically worked to support colonial projects of Indigenous erasure and dispossession. Some contemporary buffalo restoration projects seek to include Indigenous people as stakeholders and/or collaborators with unique cultural interests in buffalo, but these efforts do not always embody the material shift in power relations that Indigenous scholars have identified as a key component of decolonization. For Indigenous people, buffalo are more than a keystone species with cultural import; they are relatives whose well-being is deeply entwined with our own. For landscape-scale buffalo restoration projects to engage in decolonization, they must seek to not only repair the harm done to tribal nations through buffalo eradication but also work to support Indigenous resurgence by transforming structures of power.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Reference112 articles.

1. Albers PC, Berndt C, Brown E, et al. (2003) The home of the bison : an ethnographic and ethnohistorical study of traditional cultural affiliations to wind cave national park. U.S. National Park Service Publications and Papers. 158. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/natlpark/158 (accessed 24 November 2021).

2. Decolonizing field ecology

3. Baldy CR (2015) Coyote is not a metaphor: on decolonizing, (re)claiming and (re)naming “coyote”. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society 4(1).

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