Voir le résumé
Produced
for the ILK dialogue workshop (11-13 January 2016, UNESCO Headquarters, Paris)
organized within the framework of the Intergovernmental Platform on
Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), this film presents extracts from
interviews with three reindeer herders from the Sami community of Sirges in
Jokkmokk, Sweden. The herders attest to the importance of biological diversity
for their herding livelihood and their dependence on the health of the boreal
forest ecosystem. They describe the practices that threaten herding along with
the remaining stands of old forest, and their conflicts notably with industrial
forestry. Expressed in other terms, they analyze the ecosystem services
provided by the biodiversity of their subarctic forest milieu, and confirm that
any threat to the biodiversity upon which they and their herds depend, is a
threat to their way of life.
Mot(s) clés libre(s) : animal, Sweden, reindeer husbandry, ice, boreal forest, industrial forestry, subarctic forest, Europe, Jokkmokk, ethnographic film, breeding, interview, video, biodiversity, ecosystem services, climate change, Sami, indigenous and local knowledge, reindeer, Lapland,