Role of Indigenous Groups
Resource competition
- A resource is anything that is useful to people
- They are limited and competition arises because of their usefulness
- As demand rises, the pressure to extract them from extreme environments increases
Resources in extreme environments are:
- Cultivable land in cold and arid regions is limited
- Mineral extraction and development damages these lands, leaving people import-dependent
- Water resources are limited in both cold- and hot-arid regions
- People in arid areas struggle to find water
- In cold environments, frozen or poorly draining soil reduces accessibility to water
- Development needs significant amounts of water, leaving little for local communities
- Mineral resources in extreme environments offer opportunities for huge economic gains
- However, extraction has been costly and difficult in the past
- Improved technology and rising demand now make these regions a viable proposition
- The competition for land, water and economic resources bring various stakeholders into conflict
Indigenous groups and their lands
Doctrine of Discovery was a 15th century justification that newly arrived Europeans immediately and automatically gained legal property rights over Indigenous lands and also gained governmental, political and commercial rights over the inhabitants without the knowledge or consent of Indigenous peoples. Source: Adapted from Miller, R. et al. (2010[4]), Discovering Indigenous Lands
- For Indigenous peoples, land has a spiritual and cultural value rather than an economic one
- Conflict between Indigenous groups, or between Indigenous groups, businesses and authorities, is long-standing and biased against Indigenous peoples
- Particularly where Indigenous law, including land rights, is separate from the country’s mainstream legal structure
- In some instances, the government forcibly relocates Indigenous groups to areas away from their traditional lands and their opportunities to benefit from the wealth beneath their land
- Usually, they are relocated to land in worse locations and of poor quality, away from main populations
- In cold and arid areas, the forced relocation of disempowered Indigenous communities is common
- In Australia, many Aboriginal communities that occupied productive lands that could be used for animal raising were either killed or forcibly relocated away from their traditional land to make way for the European settlers
- Greenland, where the Uummannaq Inuit community was forcibly relocated to make way for a strategic US military base
- In northern Siberia, the Yamal Peninsula is a remote, windblown tundra region
- It has one of the world's largest natural gas reserve, at an estimated 55 trillion cubic metres
- The Indigenous Nenets are nomadic reindeer herders that have used the Yamal Peninsula for over 1 000 years.
- They graze reindeer in the north during the summer and migrate south for the winter
- Due to climate change and oil and gas exploration, the Nenets are under threat
- Russia intends to exploit the region, putting the future of nomadic herding at considerable risk
- Reindeer are unable to cross the roads and pipelines, affecting their migration routes and many have been shot
- Oil spills damage the quality of the pasture and freshwater
- The River Ob has seen a decline of fish yields as spawning grounds have been polluted
- Nearly 30 fisheries on the tributaries of the Ob are gone