Indigenous Women, Climate Change Impacts, and Collective
Action
KYLE POWYS WHYTE
Published in 2014 in Hypatia: Journal of Feminist Philosophy 29 (3): 599-616.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/hypa.12089/abstract
Indigenous peoples must adapt to current and coming climate-induced environmental changes
like sea-level rise, glacier retreat, and shifts in the ranges of important species. For some
indigenous peoples, such changes can disrupt the continuance of the systems of responsibilities
that their communities rely on self-consciously for living lives closely connected to the earth.
Within this domain of indigeneity, some indigenous women take seriously the responsibilities
that they may perceive they have as members of their communities. For the indigenous women
who have such outlooks, responsibilities that they assume in their communities expose them to
harms stemming from climate change impacts and other environmental changes. Yet at the same
time, their commitment to these responsibilities motivates them to take on leadership positions in
efforts at climate change adaptation and mitigation. I show why, at least for some indigenous
women, this is an important way of framing the climate change impacts that affect them. I then
argue that there is an important implication in this conversation for how we understand the
political responsibilities of nonindigenous parties for supporting distinctly indigenous efforts at
climate change adaptation and mitigation.
I. INTRODUCTION
Indigenous peoples encompass the 370 million persons globally whose communities exercised
systems of self-government derived from their own cosmologies before an ended or ongoing
period of colonization. Indigenous peoples now live within areas where states, like Australia or
Canada, are recognized internationally as the preeminent sovereigns (Anaya 2004). Like other
communities, indigenous peoples must adapt to climate-induced ecological variations like sealevel rise, glacier retreat, and shifts in the habitat ranges of different species. Climate change
adaptation refers to adjustments that populations make in response to such variations, which
include actions and policies from weather-protection programs to permanent relocation.
Indigenous peoples are also engaged in efforts to mitigate climate change, like transitioning to
renewable sources of energy and contesting incursions of fossil-fuel-burning industries into their
territories. Climate change mitigation refers to actions and policies that attempt to curtail certain
variations from occurring in some way in the first place. Some indigenous peoples see adaptation
and mitigation as crucial endeavors because climate variations can disrupt the systems of
responsibilities their community members self-consciously rely on for living lives closely
connected to the earth and its many living, nonliving, and spiritual beings, like animal species
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and sacred places, and interconnected collectives, like forests and water systems (Osofsky 2006;
Salick and Byg 2007; Cordalis and Suagee 2008; Krakoff 2008; Macchi et al. 2008; TauliCorpuz and Lynge 2008; UNPFII 2008; Wildcat 2009; Kronik and Verner 2010; Tsosie 2010;
Voggesser 2010; Krakoff 2011; Shearer 2011; Tebtebba 2011; Willox et al. 2011; Grossman
and Parker 2012; Roehr 2012; Abate and Kronk 2013; Maldonado, Pandya, and Colombi 2013;
Wotkyns 2013). Such systems include those that persist from time immemorial, like webs of
reciprocal relationships between a particular community and the aquatic and terrestrial plant and
animal species in their homeland. They also include systems of responsibilities emerging more
recently from creative, indigenous-led efforts to establish political relationships of peaceful
coexistence among neighbors like nation-states, settler towns, nongovernmental and religious
organizations, subnational governments like provinces, and international bodies like the United
Nations (UN). Examples include treaties, formal agreements, schedules of indigenous rights, and
other political instruments that increase respect, mutual understanding, and accountability among
indigenous parties and parties of other heritages and nations
In ongoing conversations on climate change, some indigenous women articulate how
seriously they take the specific responsibilities they perceive themselves to have within the
systems of responsibilities that matter to their communities. Such responsibilities can range from
acting as custodians and teachers of local ecological knowledge to acting as conveners of
political movements aiming at respectful coexistence with neighbors. For these indigenous
women, the responsibilities that they assume in their communities can expose them to harms
stemming from climate change and other environmental alterations. Yet at the same time, their
commitment to these responsibilities motivates them to serve as enablers of adaptation and
mitigation efforts (LaDuke 1999; Denton 2002; Yanez 2009; Glazebrook 2011; Tebtebba 2011).
Not all indigenous women share this view, of course; however, I show why, at least for some
indigenous women, this is an important way of framing their actual and potential experiences of
climate change impacts (sections II and III).
I then outline an implication of this framing for theories of political responsibility between
Indigenous women and parties like governments and organizations in adaptation and mitigation
contexts (section IV). Political responsibilities are the attitudes and patterns of behavior that
various parties are expected to express through the structure and implementation strategies of
political institutions like laws, courts, policies, mandates, agencies, departments, treaties,
declarations, schedules of rights, codes of ethics, agreements, memoranda of understanding, and
so on. The nature and expression of these responsibilities depend on the assumptions that parties
make about their roles in relation to one another. I offer a starting point for the following
positions: Some indigenous women have their own unique capacities for collective action that
advance adaptation and mitigation. Non-Indigenous parties’ political responsibilities should
involve deferring to Indigenous women’s own knowledges of and motivations for collective
action. Deference can be expressed through political institutions that bolster the conditions
needed to support Indigenous women’s collective actions (section IV). In many cases, deference
is incumbent on Indigenous national governments (e.g. U.S. federally recognized tribes) and
political organizations (e.g. Union of Ontario Indians). Deference can be expressed through
political institutions that bolster the conditions needed to support indigenous women’s collective
action (section IV). In many cases, this political responsibility is incumbent on indigenous
national governments (for example, US federally recognized tribes) and political organizations
(for example, Union of Ontario Indians). The positions in this paper seek to complement the
work of environmental philosophers Chris Cuomo, Robert Figueroa, and Patricia Glazebrook,
2
who have recently argued that responsibility must be thought of in terms of the unique agencies
of indigenous and other populations—instead of focusing only on vulnerabilities (Cuomo 2011;
Figueroa 2011; Glazebrook 2011). <1> More work beyond this paper should seek to further
clarify the political reforms needed to support indigenous women’s collective agencies for
adapting to and mitigating climate change (section V).
II. CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS, COLLECTIVE CONTINUANCE, AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Section I cited the growing academic, policy, and grey literature (informally published written
material) documenting actual and potential climate change impacts on indigenous peoples. A key
dimension of this literature concerns how climate change impacts affect the various culturally
derived responsibilities assumed by some indigenous persons as participants in particular
communities. In this section, I describe the basics of why these cultural effects matter. This view
arises from my perspective and particular experiences as a Potawatomi Indian living in the US,
from my conversations and collaborations regarding climate change with numerous indigenous
persons within and outside of North America, and from engagement with relevant academic
literature from several disciplines. Although this view may not reflect the diversity of views
among all indigenous peoples about climate change, I feel it nonetheless highlights important
elements of the discourses cited in section I and in which I am involved as a participant.
Impacts include variations of the patterns of community relations of living beings. These
patterns are the structures of collective organization, which include political, societal, cultural,
religious, and familial institutions that tie together humans and other species in multiple ways.
Climate-induced variations—or climate change impacts—are the impacts arising based on the
capacity of patterns of community relations to absorb local ecological alterations stemming from
climate change (Liu et al. 2007; Cuomo 2011). Climate change impacts are disruptive when
structures of collective organization can absorb the ecological changes only by changing key
components of the structures themselves. For example, sea-level rise may force a community to
relocate and adopt a new economy. Shifting growing seasons may require a community to
change its diet. Climate-enabled invasive species may require a community to adopt new and
more attentive environmental stewardship. Such disruptions are often experienced as harmful to
certain values (as in the case of a changing diet), but can also serve as a motivation for
improvements (as in the case of more attentive environmental stewardship).
Many indigenous persons interpret climate change impacts as jeopardizing the values
associated with the collective continuance of the communities in which they participate.
Collective continuance is a community’s aptitude for being adaptive in ways sufficient for the
livelihoods of its members to flourish into the future. The flourishing of livelihoods refers to both
indigenous conceptions of (1) how to contest colonial hardships, like religious discrimination
and disrespect for treaty rights, and (2) how to pursue comprehensive aims at robust living, like
building cohesive societies, vibrant cultures, strong subsistence and commercial economies, and
peaceful relations with a range of neighbors, from settler towns to nation-states to the United
Nations (UN). Given (1) and (2), indigenous collective continuance can be seen as a
community’s fitness for making adjustments to current or predicted change in ways that contest
colonial hardships and embolden comprehensive aims at robust living (Whyte 2013).
Climate change impacts can be understood as affecting the quality of the relationships that
constitute collective continuance. According to this view, collective continuance is composed of
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and oriented around the many relationships within single communities and amid neighboring
communities that persons assume based on their culturally framed perceptions of what matters.
The capacity to contest colonial hardships, for example, may require relationships of solidarity
among community members that cultivate political action, furnish healing from colonial traumas
(like boarding schools), and ignite spiritual awakening (Ortiz and Chino 1980; Alfred 1999;
LaDuke 1999; Tinker 2004; Green 2007). It may also require establishing relationships of trust
and common political purpose across indigenous peoples who face similar hardships (Mayer
2007; Grossman 2008). The capacity to build cohesive societies, vibrant cultures, and
subsistence economies may require close-knit family and social relationships, such as strong
intergenerational ties and shared experiences between elders and youth and sustainable regimes
of land-tenure (Merculieff 2007; Trosper 2009; Wildcat 2009; Tebtebba 2011). Emotion-laden
relationships among species and with features of the land (like rivers or mountains) and natural
interdependent collectives may also be required (Willox et al. 2011). Commercial economies
require relationships that generate feasible, culturally appropriate opportunities and relationships
that regulate economic production (Trosper 2007; Ranco et al. 2011). Peaceful relations with
neighbors require relationships that respect the differences of each community in terms of
culture, relative power to exploit one another, specific needs, and capacities to exercise agency
(Alfred 1999; Holmes, Lickers, and Barkley 2002; Napoleon 2005; Turner 2006; Davis 2010;
Ross et al. 2010; Middleton 2011).
The significances of these relationships are realized through the responsibilities incumbent on
the parties to the relationships. That is, to be in a relationship is to have responsibilities toward
the others in the relationship. Many indigenous authors have described the idea of responsibility.
I interpret them as seeing responsibilities as the reciprocal (though not necessarily equal)
attitudes and patterns of behavior that are expected by and of various parties by virtue of the
assumptions made about how the parties relate to one another within a community context
(Weaver 1996; Alfred 1999; LaDuke 1999; Kimmerer 2000; Pierotti and Wildcat 2000; Borrows
2002; Mayer 2007; McGregor 2009; Wildcat 2009). For example, elders may assume
responsibilities to mentor youth by passing on wisdom or leading certain ceremonies; younger
generations are, in turn, responsible for learning actively from the elders about the nonhuman,
spiritual, and ritualistic dimensions of the community and its conception of the earth, its living,
nonliving, and spiritual beings, and natural interdependent collectives (forested areas, species
habitats, water systems, and so on). A community may have a responsibility to care for salmon
habitat; salmon, in turn, may provide food and support for other species. Community members
may be responsible for kindling spirituality by not evaluating their fellow community members
according to colonial stereotypes about indigenous women or by visibly standing up against
policies that victimize some people because they are indigenous women (Smith 2005). Such may
be understood as a mutual responsibility of honor and respect among community members.
International bodies like the UN may have responsibilities to respect emerging norms that
acknowledge the special needs and knowledges of indigenous peoples (Anaya 2004; Mauro and
Hardison 2000). These and other similar responsibilities are among the constitutive features of
collective continuance because—on this view—they enable the contesting of colonial hardships
and the pursuit of robust living. Some indigenous people’s concern with collective continuance
has to do with maintaining the capacity to be adaptive with respect to relational responsibilities,
or all those relationships and their corresponding responsibilities that facilitate the future
flourishing of indigenous lives that are closely connected to the earth and its many living and
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nonliving beings and natural interdependent collectives. I refer to relational responsibilities as
responsibilities in the rest of the paper.
Responsibilities constitute collective continuance as part of larger systems of interconnected
responsibilities. Systems of responsibilities are the actual schemes of roles and relationships that
serve as the background against which particular responsibilities stand out as meaningful and
binding. For example, a responsibility to maintain species habitat is part of a more
comprehensive web of interspecies responsibilities that are tied to a community’s cosmology.
Cosmology refers to the fundamental way in which community members, in common,
experience everything around them as endowed or not with agency, spirituality, and
connectedness. Systems of responsibilities have intrinsic value and instrumental value for
communities. For example, in Wabanaki culture the responsibilities surrounding berry plants
have intrinsic value because they are integral to customs and rituals and establish part of the
cultural status of Wabanaki women (Lynn et al. 2013). Thus, an entire system of responsibilities
is embedded in and permeates everything about the berry plants. The system has intrinsic value
because it is essential for framing certain dimensions of Wabanaki existence. The berry plants
have instrumental value because they are superfoods, according to nutritionists, having health
benefits like cardiovascular protection. Even systems of responsibilities amid communities have
both kinds of value. For example, the government-to-government relation between the US and
federally recognized tribes has intrinsic value because it can honor, at least in part, indigenous
senses of nationhood. It also has instrumental value because respecting tribal sovereignty is
considered to be the best way to formulate, implement, and assess policies (Lynn et al. 2013;
Whyte 2013).
The concept of collective continuance identifies a range of values that some indigenous
persons hold in relation to the patterns of community life in which they participate. The
relationships and responsibilities constitutive of collective continuance can be disrupted by
climate change impacts. A reason for this is that climate change impacts can alter the ecological
contexts in which systems of responsibilities are meaningful. Changes in landscapes may
engender fewer opportunities for elders to assume the responsibility to teach youth in practical
situations. Climate change may affect the range, quality, and quantity of species like berries,
making it more difficult or even impossible for tribal members to assume the responsibilities
they perceive themselves to have toward those species (Lynn et al. 2013). Anishinaabe scholar
Deborah McGregor, for example, discusses how variable weather patterns, invasive species, and
widely fluctuating temperatures are engendering spring conditions that make it hard to have
sensitive knowledge about when to begin or stop tapping maple trees for syrup. Making syrup is
a traditional cultural and familial activity that spans generations and provides a source of
nourishment for family and community members. Multiple, interconnected responsibilities are
bound up in this activity, among young and old, siblings, between humans and trees, and natural
interconnected collectives (GLIFWC 2006; Cave et al. 2011). Disruptions of webs of
responsibilities involved in relations with elders, berries, and maple trees jeopardize some of
what is valued intrinsically and extrinsically by certain indigenous peoples. The severity of
disruption is of course influenced and amplified by the obstructive political orders rooted in
colonialism, industrialization, imperialism, and globalization to which many indigenous peoples
are subject. I treat these obstructive circumstances in more detail elsewhere, though I do not
discuss them in any substantial detail here (Whyte 2013).
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III. CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS, INDIGENOUS WOMEN, AND SYSTEMS OF RESPONSIBILITIES
Individual indigenous people, even those of the same community, do not experience disruptions
of systems of responsibilities in the same way. Kinship, age, wealth, race, religion, political
situation, and other characteristics affect and frame what one experiences as an indigenous
person. In the domain of indigeneity I have been discussing so far, more focused academic and
grey literature is emerging in which some indigenous women express how climate change
impacts affect their ability to exercise the responsibilities that they assume within the webs of
responsibilities that matter to their communities. This section outlines ways of interpreting
disruptions of systems of responsibilities through a gender framework that I interpret as being
suggested by some indigenous women scholars and activists. Insofar as systems of
responsibilities are a key part of what constitutes collective continuance, I intend to indicate why
it is important to consider how these scholars and activists discuss indigenous women’s
experiences of climate change impacts.
McGregor’s scholarship on water over the last ten years is a point of departure for considering
how some indigenous women may see themselves as implicated in climate change impacts
(McGregor 2012). According to McGregor, many Anishinaabe people value water greatly, which
arises from the Anishinaabe creation story in which water is considered to play the role of a
source and supporter of life. In this role, water mediates interactions among many living beings
on the earth. Consequently, water is a considered a relative that has responsibilities to give and
support life (Lavalley 2006; McGregor 2009). Humans, in turn, have responsibilities to care for
and respect water; they must especially do things that encourage water’s life-giving force.
Ceremonies are structured to remind people of their connections to water, and bodies of water
are considered to have their own unique personalities.
Water has intrinsic value because it is among the basic elements of Anishinaabe cosmology
(as told in the creation story), which frames how community members view the reality of their
relations to water. Water has instrumental value because of the myriad ways in which water
quality and abundance benefit human and animal health (McGregor 2009). Touching on both
senses of value, McGregor says that:
We must look at the life that water supports (plants/medicines, animals, people, birds,
etc.) and the life that supports water (e.g., the earth, the rain, the fish). Water has a role
and a responsibility to fulfill, just as people do. We do not have the right to interfere
with water’s duties to the rest of Creation. Indigenous knowledge tells us that water is
the blood of Mother Earth and that water itself is considered a living entity with just as
much right to live as we have. (McGregor 2009, 37–38; see also McGregor and
Whitaker 2001)
In accordance with the details of this account, indigenous peoples, like water, have culturally
perceived responsibilities to exercise. In McGregor’s descriptions of her culture, women in
particular have responsibilities to water as Anishinaabe women. For example, McGregor cites a
position paper by a women’s group, Akii Kwe, from the Bkejwanong Territory (Walpole Island
First Nation), which says that “We use the sacred water in our Purification Lodge, in ceremonies
of healing, rites of passage, naming ceremonies and especially in women’s ceremonies“ (Akii
Kwe 1998, 3; McGregor 2009). McGregor describes further a basis for how Anishinaabe women
have responsibilities to water:
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In the water ceremony we make an offering to water, to acknowledge its life-giving
forces and to pay respect. We have a responsibility to take care of the water and this
ceremony reminds us to do it. Women bring forth life, the life of the people. Water
brings forth life also, and we have a special role to play in this responsibility that we
share with water. (McGregor and Whitaker 2001, 24; see also McGregor 2009)
In this paper, I can only extrapolate an idea of the multiple, specific responsibilities that
Anishinaabe women have toward water as McGregor describes. In her published work, women
are described as and attest to having responsibilities within ceremonies (and for convening
them), responsibilities to attend to the quality of water, responsibilities to develop and pass on
knowledge of water and its stewardship to younger generations. They also have responsibilities
to take action to protect water when its quality is compromised. These more specific
responsibilities are part of a more general significance of the relationship between women and
water for Anishinaabe communities. This relationship is part of the identity of some Anishinaabe
women (intrinsic value), for McGregor, and some of their specific responsibilities protect the
instrumental value of water to them and their community members. McGregor’s position on
Anishinaabe women’s responsibilities and water is important not because of would-be factual
claims about indigenous women’s roles, which can be challenged, but because it indicates that
certain kinds of orientation toward water, for example, imply cultural understandings of one’s
responsibilities to the earth’s living, nonliving, and spiritual beings and natural interdependent
collectives.
Climate change impacts in the Great Lakes are projected to affect the ecological contexts
needed for some Anishinaabe women and water to carry out their responsibilities to each other.
Climate change impacts that degrade water in different ways will affect some of the core
dimensions of Anishinaabe women’s identities and their contributions within their communities,
and will make their responsibilities to water more time-consuming and harder (if not impossible)
to carry out. Some of the effects on women’s very existences concern what it means to grapple
with degradation of a close relative (in this case water). Water may not be able to be used by
women in ceremonies as it was before. Moreover, indigenous women do not participate actively
in Canadian climate change or environmental-policy processes, which threatens their
responsibility to protect water (Cave et al. 2011; Corbiere, McGregor, and Migwans 2011). This
point can be seen as part of a gender framework that sees climate change impacts as being
implicated with the responsibilities some women assume in indigenous communities. Degraded
water is a core existential concern for Anishinaabe women. Because of this, they experience
some aspects of climate change impacts differently than indigenous men and non-Anishinaabe
persons. Though my focus in this paper is cultural, a more complete gender framework would
include greater attention to other social and political dimensions of indigenous women’s lives.
Despite lacking participation in policy processes, some Anishinaabe women are taking
collective action to carry out their responsibilities to water. McGregor discusses how a group of
Anishinaabe women began walking around the Great Lakes in the early 2000s, which they call
the Mother Earth Water Walk. The purpose is to help people in the basin recognize and rerecognize the importance of water in its spiritual dimensions instead of as an inanimate resource.
The spring walks include a water ceremony, feast, and celebration, and the participating
grandmothers take turns carrying a water vessel and eagle staff. Another collective action is the
grassroots women’s group Akii Kwe, which I briefly referred to earlier via McGregor’s work.
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McGregor describes it as a group of Anishinaabe women from Walpole Island who “have been
diligently trying to protect water in their territory for years. Guided by their traditional
responsibilities, they consider it their duty to speak for the water” (McGregor 2005, 107).
McGregor emphasizes how the women in Akii Kwe are guided by their knowledge of how to be
sensitive to water and to care for water, which arises from their living close to and attentively to
bodies of water (McGregor 2012).
McGregor documents how these collective actions by Anishinaabe women are changing
decision-making processes in Canada. The Anishinabek Nation, an indigenous multiparty
organization that plays an important role in Canadian politics, created the Women’s Water
Commission for bringing women’s voices into Ontario and Great Lakes water issues. The
explicit goal of the commission includes fostering “the traditional role of the Women in caring
for water.” “Traditional,” here, should be understood according to McGregor’s descriptions of
the responsibilities of indigenous women. The Commission seeks to encourage recognition of
traditional responsibilities along with the need to include women as part of the decision-making
processes (McGregor 2012, 12–13). The first appointed leader of the commission was among the
women who were integral in establishing the Mother Earth Water Walk. The Walk has also
spread across North America, becoming a regional form of action that includes more people each
year, not just Anishinaabe women (McGregor 2012; Mother Earth Water Walk 2013). Each of
these collective actions could be described as a form of indigenous women’s networking. I
understand networks as strategic coalitions and committees that coordinate joint social action for
addressing pressing issues and that facilitate learning and respect across the different lives that
people live.
According to McGregor’s descriptions, these indigenous women’s networks emanate from
Anishinaabe women’s responsibilities.<2> Based on McGregor’s work, I interpret Akii Kwe, the
Mother Earth Water Walk, and the Women’s Water Commission as endeavoring to protect two
important types of systems of responsibilities. The first type is persisting systems of
responsibilities. These are systems that are identified and interpreted as having existed within a
culture from time immemorial. The second type is emerging systems of responsibilities. These
are systems that need to be established now as innovative and morally necessary ways of
addressing recent issues like climate change impacts. The forms of Anishinaabe women’s
collective action mentioned here protect persisting systems of responsibilities rooted in how
aspects of the Anishinaabe creation story delineate enduring responsibilities between women and
water. They also promote emerging systems of responsibilities having to do with making spaces
for women’s voices in provincial and national decision-making as exemplified by the Women’s
Water Commission. Hopefully, nonindigenous Canadians cultivate responsibilities to respect and
listen to Anishinaabe women. Though much progress remains to be made, collective action is
changing the ways in which Anishinaabe women and their Canadian neighbors interact.
Collective continuance is promoted, then, both in terms of maintaining the persisting systems of
responsibilities, but also in making strides toward better, responsibility-based systems of
coexistence among Anishinaabe people and their neighbors.
Many indigenous women and other scholars outside of North America express compatible
views about climate change impacts and responsibilities (Dictaan-Bang-oa 2009; Apgar 2011;
Mandaluyong Declaration 2011; Tebtebba 2011). The Mandaluyong Declaration of the Global
Conference on Indigenous Women, Climate Change, and REDD Plus (2010) involved eighty
women from sixty indigenous peoples from twenty-nine countries. Focusing on indigenous
women, the declaration discusses multiple ways in which indigenous women’s cultural
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responsibilities and social situations put them at great risk from climate change impacts. Shifts in
species and changes in the quality of environments are described as disruptions to indigenous
women’s very identities and contributions to the overall webs of relationships and
responsibilities that matter to their communities. The declaration claims further that climate
change impacts weaken “cultural norms and values that guide customary sustainable resource
use and management associated with food production and consumption” (Mandaluyong
Declaration 2011, 300). The declaration states that
Our spirituality which links humans and nature, the seen and the unseen, the past,
present and future, and the living and nonliving has been and remains as the foundation
of our sustainable resource management and use. We believe that if we continue to live
by our values and still use our sustainable systems and practices for meeting our basic
needs, we can adapt better to climate change. (304)
As a form of collective action, the declaration sets down seven priorities for climate adaptation
and mitigation that must be communicated to and adopted by other indigenous and
nonindigenous persons, communities, organizations, and governments. The seven priorities
suggest ways in which both persisting and emerging systems of responsibilities can be protected
and created. For example, priority 3 provides a call to
reinforce indigenous women’s traditional knowledge on mitigation and adaptation and
facilitate the transfer of this knowledge to the younger generations. This includes
knowledge on traditional forest management, sustainable agriculture, pastoralism,
disaster preparedness and rehabilitation . . . and enhance traditional community sharing
and self-help systems. . . . (308)
The declaration also seeks to create emerging systems of responsibilities among indigenous and
nonindigenous parties and the implementation of the UN Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). Priority 5 calls for facilitating “participation of Indigenous
women to relevant national and global processes related to climate change and human rights . . .
play active roles in National Climate Change Networks, National REDD Plus Formations . . .”
(309–10).
I interpret the Mandaluyong Declaration and the examples described by McGregor as unique
ways in which indigenous women take collective actions intended to support the collective
continuance of their communities. Their efforts contribute to climate change adaptation and
mitigation and strengthen the voices of the indigenous women who participate in them. In some
cases, they also serve to strengthen the voices of others who are influenced by and begin to take
part in these collective actions. Some of the motivations for these collective actions are the very
perceptions that climate change impacts affect indigenous women’s responsibilities within webs
of living, nonliving, and spiritual beings and natural, interdependent collectives. Certainly, the
structure of these collective actions is deeply indebted to the very responsibilities that motivate
effort in the first place. For example, the structure of the Mother Earth Water Walk flows from
the Anishinaabe cultural traditions associated with the relationship between women and water. I
have called these webs systems of responsibilities. I see the work in the previous section as part
of a gender framework because it emphasizes some ways in which being an indigenous woman
affects how one experiences and is motivated to respond to climate change impacts.
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IV. INDIGENOUS WOMEN AND POLITICAL RESPONSIBILITIES
According to the authors and work discussed in the previous section, some indigenous women
feel strongly that climate change impacts involve disruptions of their responsibilities as
participants in their communities. Such disruptions may be tied to considerable climate injustices
for the following reasons. Indigenous women may not have contributed as much as other groups
to climate change drivers like deforestation and greenhouse-gas emissions, and may be more
vulnerable to harm owing to their living under certain institutions that they did not create nor
benefit from (for example, sexist institutions, colonial institutions, and so on). Each of these
injustices suggests that nonindigenous parties have political responsibilities to indigenous
women relative to climate change impacts. Again, political responsibilities are the reciprocal
attitudes and patterns of behavior that various parties are expected to express through the
structure and implementation strategies of political institutions like laws, courts, policies,
mandates, agencies, departments, treaties, declarations, schedules of rights, codes of ethics,
agreements, memoranda of understanding, and so on. The content of these responsibilities arises
from the assumptions that parties make about their roles in relation to one another. In this
section, I provide further details about the theories behind the arguments for political
responsibilities just mentioned. I then seek to outline how these theories do not yet include any
political responsibilities that would support the concerns and forms of collective action
belonging uniquely to some indigenous women.
There are three good, and commonly invoked, theories for why parties like governments,
corporations, nongovernmental organizations, and various consumers and consumer groups have
political responsibilities to groups like indigenous women. First, political responsibilities can be
derived from the fact that indigenous women are members of indigenous peoples whose
precolonial and current footprints are likely to be relatively small, even though many such
communities today use automobiles, electricity, and manufactured goods (Cuomo 2011). Parties
like governments of industrial nations are politically responsible for their having promoted and
benefited from much higher footprints because disruptive climate change impacts are
experienced by those who contributed and benefited relatively little. Second, political
responsibility can stem from the fact that, as women, indigenous women are likely to live under
oppressive institutions that endorse or allow economic marginalization, exploitation, racial and
gender discrimination, inequality before the law, systematic violence, deprivation of political
participation, and silencing. These oppressive social structures make climate change impacts
even more disruptive because women’s capacities are disempowered, and they are disengaged
from involvement in key political processes (Denton 2002; Glazebrook 2011; Tebtebba 2011).
Indigenous women may, then, have special vulnerabilities, as other women do in relation to
climate change. Indigenous women did not create these institutions and certainly do not benefit
from them since the institutions are rooted in patriarchy, colonialism, imperialism, and
globalization. Parties like nation-states and corporations have a political responsibility to
eliminate discrimination against women. Third, political responsibility can also be understood in
relation to indigenous women’s knowledge. Given that many indigenous women live close to the
land, they may be acute observers of local manifestations of ecological changes, have knowledge
of long time-scales of the environment where their communities have lived for generations, and
have key insights for understanding the best strategies to adapt (Figueroa 2011; Glazebrook
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2011; Tebtebba 2011). Scientists and policy-makers have a political responsibility to include
indigenous women’s knowledge in their research, planning, and other empirical work.
The theories of political responsibility just outlined are and could be exercised in the political
institutions dealing with climate change through the provision of support and resources for
indigenous women to avoid bearing impacts to which they contributed little in the first place or
to which they are particularly vulnerable. For example, UN policies, such as REDD+ (Reducing
Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation), should not force indigenous women to
change their already low carbon-footprint lifestyles in order that the forests their communities
depend on can suit the needs of others whose behaviors are slow to change. Climate change
adaptation policies, for example, coming from the UN, should always include gender analysis for
determining people’s needs and susceptibilities. Climate change policies should be adjusted to
conform with existing rights codes such as Articles 21 and 22 of UNDRIP, which reference the
need for special attention to the rights and special needs of indigenous women and that
indigenous women enjoy full protection and guarantees against all forms of violence and
discrimination (Tebtebba 2006). Women’s voices as knowers should be formally included in
policy processes. Glazebrook, for example, argues that “it . . . is counterproductive not to include
women’s perspectives in climate change adaptation discussions” because of the “contributions
they can make to the climate struggle as resilient and expert actors” (Glazebrook 2011, 769).
Scientific organizations like the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the US
National Climate Assessment must support the inclusion of indigenous women’s knowledge in
their empirical work (Nakashima et al. 2012). Each of the three responsibilities, then, can be
imagined as changing how political institutions supporting adaptation and mitigation address
indigenous women’s relatively small contribution to climate change, their special vulnerability,
and their ecological knowledge.
Each of these political responsibilities should continue to be enshrined and expressed in
relevant political institutions. When appropriate, they should also be enshrined in the policies of
indigenous governments and multiparty indigenous organizations. However, the political
responsibilities just outlined do not yet address the claims made by indigenous women that I
discussed in the previous section, which include how indigenous women’s responsibilities, and
hence identities, are implicated in climate change impacts and the unique forms of collective
action that indigenous women take toward adaptation and mitigation. There are important
reasons why this is the case. The first two political responsibilities are based on the passivity of
indigenous women as members of indigenous peoples. Indigenous women are described
primarily in terms of what they have not brought about. Yet the Mother Earth Water Walk and
the Mandaluyong Declaration emphasize the agency of indigenous women that arises from the
spiritual relations they maintain with relatives like water. In these cases, climate change impacts
are seen as implicating the responsibilities these indigenous women enact within systems of
responsibilities that matter to their communities. Moreover, these indigenous women have
capacities for unique forms of collective action that can influence adaptation and mitigation
beyond their communities, and serve as vehicles for more formal inclusion of indigenous women
in policy processes from which they were previously excluded.
The third political responsibility emphasizes the involvement of indigenous women as
knowledge keepers and knowers in other senses who should be included within scientific and
political organizations that have already been put in place by nonindigenous parties, like the
IPCC. Yet McGregor understands indigenous women’s knowledge as being more than a body of
insights about the environment; rather, knowledge involves being embedded within systems of
11
responsibilities that one actively performs. Knowledge, then, refers to knowing what one ought
to do to be a responsible environmental steward or guardian (in McGregor’s case, she discusses
water). The Mandaluyong Declaration also expands the notion of knowledge by placing priority
on what science can do for indigenous women if they are allowed to determine the purpose for
which scientific research is employed. Both McGregor and the Declaration stress broader notions
of knowledge that embrace indigenous women’s insights for establishing principles and
structures of collective action toward adaptation and mitigation that are appropriate for their
communities. For example, environmental scientists have often told indigenous peoples not to
eat their first foods because of contamination. These scientific assessments often included
indigenous women’s knowledge. Yet the impact of not eating traditional foods, which can sever
multiple responsibilities among humans and certain species, can lead to far worse harms to
indigenous identity, community well-being, and human health (such as having to eat more fast
food) (Arquette et al. 2002; Ranco et al. 2011; see also Nadasdy 1999). Here, a major articulation
of indigenous women’s knowledge is often understood according to knowledge of what
responsibilities are important for indigenous communities’ collective continuance and how
science can be redeployed to serve these responsibilities, instead of serving only the goals
established by people of other heritages and nations.
Far from being passive or serving as epistemic sources only, McGregor and the Declaration
point out, in my interpretation, how the responsibilities that some indigenous women assume are
wellsprings for high-impact collective actions whose motivations and structures belong uniquely
to indigenous women. It is this idea that is missing from the theories of political responsibility
enumerated earlier in this section. The indigenous women’s networks described in the previous
section are not forms of collective agency motivated by what another society understands to be a
fair form of political participation for indigenous women. They are forms of collective action
based on structures that indigenous women see as furnishing regional and global-scale
participation and representation for their culturally inspired concerns and ideas, and that are most
appropriate for addressing how their communities are affected by climate change impacts. They
are forms of collective action that seek to engender global relations of coexistence on indigenous
people’s terms. A fourth theory of political responsibility can be glimpsed here that starts with
deference to what indigenous women know is needed for implementing their own unique forms
of collective action (Thomas 2006). Via their political institutions, parties like the UN, nationstates, corporations, and consumer groups would see themselves as being responsible for
bolstering the conditions needed for indigenous women to succeed in exercising their own forms
of collective action. That is, deference would be expressed through political institutions that did
not prevent but would include measures that provide the particular kinds of backing needed for
indigenous women’s forms of collective action to flourish.
V. CONCLUSION: TOWARD FUTURE WORK
This paper is only an opening call for more philosophical engagement with a conception of
political responsibility that would include bolstering indigenous women’s own forms of
collective action that support the collective continuance of their communities. The idea that there
is a political responsibility to bolster the conditions for indigenous women’s networking does
not, obviously, tell us what those conditions are. Further work needs to engage indigenous
communities in order to identify how nonindigenous parties as well as indigenous governments
12
and multiparty groups can provide the assistance needed for these networks to flourish.
Moreover, many other forms of collective action besides indigenous women’s networking must
be understood. Nonindigenous parties should rethink the models by which they understand their
political responsibilities to indigenous peoples to be inclusive of some of the ideas for collective
action advanced by indigenous women.
NOTE
1. This paper also compliments the work of environmental philosopher Lisa Kretz, which
focuses on the importance of understanding people’s motives for addressing climate change
(Kretz 2012).
2. These forms of collective action serve as examples of what Daniel Wildcat has called
“indigeneity” (Wildcat 2009).
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