Environmental Ethics

Volume 18, Issue 1, Spring 1996

Douglas J. Buege
Pages 71-88

The Ecologically Noble Savage Revisited

Cited by

  • Mark Pluciennik. Archaeological Dialogues. The invention of hunter-gatherers in seventeenth-century Europe 2002. [CrossRef]
  • Peter Bogucki. Archaeological Dialogues. Enlightened Views of the Transition to Agriculture 2002. [CrossRef]
  • Richard J. Chacon. The Ethics of Anthropology and Amerindian Research 2012: 311. [CrossRef]
  • Rebecca A. Johns, Julie Beach. Journal of Outdoor and Environmental Education. Experiencing nature at Weedon Island Nature Preserve: discourses of duality, willful blindness and ecological nobility 2023. [CrossRef]
  • Aldemaro Romero. Conservation Biology. Death and Taxes: the Case of the Depletion of Pearl Oyster Beds in Sixteenth-Century Venezuela 2003. [CrossRef]
  • Richard J. Chacon, Rubén G. Mendoza. The Ethics of Anthropology and Amerindian Research 2012: 451. [CrossRef]
  • Donna T. Mayo, Marilyn M. Helms, Henry M. Codjoe. International Journal of Educational Management. Reasons to remain in college: a comparison of high school and college students 2004. [CrossRef]
  • Leviathans at the Gold Mine 2014: 208. [CrossRef]
  • Vincent Clement. Progress in Human Geography. Beyond the sham of the emancipatory Enlightenment: Rethinking the relationship of Indigenous epistemologies, knowledges, and geography through decolonizing paths 2019. [CrossRef]
  • Hames Raymond. Annual Review of Anthropology. The Ecologically Noble Savage Debate 2007. [CrossRef]
  • Wei-Ta Fang, Hsin-Wen Hu, Chien-Shing Lee. Sustainability Science. Atayal’s identification of sustainability: traditional ecological knowledge and indigenous science of a hunting culture 2016. [CrossRef]
  • L. Failing, R. Gregory, M. Harstone. Ecological Economics. Integrating science and local knowledge in environmental risk management: A decision-focused approach 2007. [CrossRef]
  • Marek Zvelebil. Archaeological Dialogues. The Invention Of Hunter-Gatherers in Seventeenth Century Europe? A Comment on Mark Pluciennik 2002. [CrossRef]
  • Damien Bischoff. Archaeological Dialogues. The Invention of Hunter-Gatherers in Seventeenth-Century Europe – A Comment from Upper Mesopotamia, Near East 2002. [CrossRef]
  • REINER BUERGIN. Modern Asian Studies. Contested Rights of Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples in Conflicts over Biocultural Diversity: The case of Karen communities in Thung Yai, a World Heritage Site in Thailand 2015. [CrossRef]
  • Alan Reid *, Kelly Teamey, Justin Dillon. Environmental Education Research. Valuing and utilizing traditional ecological knowledge: tensions in the context of education and the environment 2004. [CrossRef]
  • Anna Willow. Human Organization. Re(con)figuring Alliances: Place Membership, Environmental Justice, and the Remaking of Indigenous-Environmentalist Relationships in Canada's Boreal Forest 2012. [CrossRef]
  • Thomas Thornton, Douglas Deur, Herman Kitka. Human Ecology. Cultivation of Salmon and other Marine Resources on the Northwest Coast of North America 2015. [CrossRef]
  • J. Gareth Polhill, Bruce Edmonds. Futures. Cognition and hypocognition: Discursive and simulation-supported decision-making within complex systems 2023. [CrossRef]
  • JULIA P. G. JONES, MIJASOA M. ANDRIAMAROVOLOLONA, NEAL HOCKLEY. Conservation Biology. The Importance of Taboos and Social Norms to Conservation in Madagascar 2008. [CrossRef]
  • Mark Pluciennik. Archaeological Dialogues. History Matters: A Reply 2002. [CrossRef]
  • Paul Nadasdy. Ethnohistory. Transcending the Debate over the Ecologically Noble Indian: Indigenous Peoples and Environmentalism 2005. [CrossRef]
  • Vincent Artman. Religion, Sustainability, and Place 2021: 253. [CrossRef]
  • Chad E. Dear, Olin Eugene Myers. Society & Natural Resources. Conflicting Understandings of Wilderness and Subsistence in Alaskan National Parks 2005. [CrossRef]
  • Arthur H. Westing. Environmental Conservation. Core values for sustainable development 1996. [CrossRef]
  • Pieter Van de Velde. Archaeological Dialogues. on The Invention of Hunter-Gatherers in Seventeenth Century Europe 2002. [CrossRef]
  • Robert VanWynsberghe. Qualitative Inquiry. The “Unfinished Story”: Narratively Analyzing Collective Action Frames in Social Movements 2001. [CrossRef]
  • Alan Barnard. Archaeological Dialogues. Hunter-Gatherers: Seventeenth or Eighteenth-Century Invention? 2002. [CrossRef]
  • Michael L. Cepek. Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology. Essential Commitments: Identity and the Politics of Cofán Conservation 2008. [CrossRef]
  • Terre Satterfield, Robin Gregory, Sarah Klain, Mere Roberts, Kai M. Chan. Journal of Environmental Management. Culture, intangibles and metrics in environmental management 2013. [CrossRef]
  • Mijasoa M. Andriamarovololona, Julia P. G. Jones. Sacred Species and Sites 2012: 207. [CrossRef]
  • Robyn Zink. Journal of Outdoor and Environmental Education. Can we move beyond ‘Indigenous good, non-Indigenous bad’ in thinking about people and the environment? 2007. [CrossRef]
  • Anja Nygren. Critique of Anthropology. Local Knowledge in the Environment–Development Discourse 1999. [CrossRef]
  • Hosein Jalilvand. Journal of Popular Film and Television. James Cameron’s Avatar and the Filmic Legacy of the White Hunter 2021. [CrossRef]
  • Tanvi Agrawal, Mark Hirons, Alfred Gathorne-Hardy. Current Research in Environmental Sustainability. Understanding farmers' cropping decisions and implications for crop diversity conservation: Insights from Central India 2021. [CrossRef]
  • Umut Tasa. Leonardo. In-Habitant: An Inquiry into a Non-Dualistic Duality of Human and Nonhuman 2023. [CrossRef]
  • Anna J. Willow. Ethnohistory. Clear-Cutting and Colonialism: The Ethnopolitical Dynamics of Indigenous Environmental Activism in Northwestern Ontario 2009. [CrossRef]
  • Clare Palmer. Ethics, Policy & Environment. Place-Historical Narratives: Road—or Roadblock—to Sustainability? 2011. [CrossRef]
  • Wei-Ta Fang. Envisioning Environmental Literacy 2020: 33. [CrossRef]
  • Leviathans at the Gold Mine 2014: 215. [CrossRef]
There may be additional citations on Google Scholar.