Strengths of Zapotec Indigenous Knowledge in Water Management
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-14-2024
Publication Title
ACS ES&T Water
DOI
10.1021/acsestwater.3c00731
Abstract
Indigenous peoples have a deep well of knowledge gathered through their immersive experiential lifestyle. Such Indigenous knowledge (IK) is self-sufficient and has allowed them to overcome environmental challenges and manage water for millennia. Zapotecs of Southern Mexico are contemporaries of Incans and Mayans, who possess such an IK and pass it down through traditional practices and community-oriented traditions. Understanding the interactions of IK (regarding water resource management) with Western scientific knowledge (WSK) can illuminate pathways to integrate these disparate realms of knowledge. With such an aim of convergence, this research employs household surveys, water sampling, and structural equation modeling. The model results reveal significant pathways among variables linking Indigenous origin, Indigenous practices, environmental concern, and perception of water quality risks. The deep-rooted Zapotec knowledge of their water resources allows us to recognize changes in water quality (based on their past experiences). We have probed their concerns further with physicochemical and microbial characterizations of collected water samples. The integrated (IK and WSK) approach followed here can be considered as a viable strategy to reveal intricate relationships between these knowledge realms and facilitate the protection of water resources and human health.
Recommended Citation
Klingaman, Emily E., Busra Sonmez Baghirzade, Lewis Stetson Rowles, Luis Javier Toledo-Flores, Maria Eufemia Pérez-Flores, Juana Yolanda Lopez-Cruz, Navid B. Saleh.
2024.
"Strengths of Zapotec Indigenous Knowledge in Water Management."
ACS ES&T Water, 4 (6): 2382-2389: American Chemical Society.
doi: 10.1021/acsestwater.3c00731
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/civil-eng-facpubs/104
Comments
Georgia Southern University faculty member, Lewis S. Rowles co-authored, "Strengths of Zapotec Indigenous Knowledge in Water Management."