skip to primary navigation skip to content
 

 

You are not currently logged in

SPRI library catalogue

View a record

Please note: You are viewing the legacy database of the Scott Polar Research Institute Library catalogue. It is no longer being updated, so does not reliably reflect our current library holdings.

Please search for material in iDiscover for up-to-date information about the library collection.


Record #192813:

Should we turn the tent? Inuit women and climate change / Martha Dowsley, and 4 others.

Title: Should we turn the tent? Inuit women and climate change / Martha Dowsley, and 4 others.
Author(s): Dowsley, Martha.
Date: 2010.
In: Études Inuit = Inuit Studies. (2010.), Vol. 34(1) (2010)
Abstract: Explores Inuit women's perspectives on recent environmental changes, many of which are often attributed to climate change by Inuit or others. Finds that Inuit men and women have overlapping, but not identical, knowledge. Inuit women stress secondary effects of climate change and how environmental change and resulting behavioural modifications have together altered economic, social and cultural fabric of Inuit communities.
Notes:

Études Inuit = Inuit Studies. Vol. 34(1) :151-165 (2010).

In special issue The Inuit and climate change.

Keywords: 3-055.2 -- Women.
323.1 -- National and ethnic minorities: Inuit.
36 -- Social welfare.
364.122/.124 -- Social change and associated problems.
39 -- Ethnography.
113/119 -- Attitudes to nature.
502 -- Environmental issues.
551.583 -- Climatic changes.
J -- Social sciences.
(*3) -- Arctic regions.
(*41) -- Canada.
(*440.2) -- Nunavut.
SPRI record no.: 192813

MARCXML

LDR 01590naa#a2200000#a#4500
001 SPRI-192813
005 20240416212831.0
007 ta
008 240416s2010####xx####|##|###|0||#0|eng#d
035 ## ‡aSPRI-192813
040 ## ‡aUkCU-P‡beng‡eaacr
100 1# ‡aDowsley, Martha.
245 10 ‡aShould we turn the tent? Inuit women and climate change /‡cMartha Dowsley, and 4 others.
260 ## ‡a[S.l.] :‡b[s.n.],‡c2010.
300 ## ‡ap. 151-165.
500 ## ‡aÉtudes Inuit = Inuit Studies. Vol. 34(1) :151-165 (2010).
500 ## ‡aIn special issue The Inuit and climate change.
520 3# ‡aExplores Inuit women's perspectives on recent environmental changes, many of which are often attributed to climate change by Inuit or others. Finds that Inuit men and women have overlapping, but not identical, knowledge. Inuit women stress secondary effects of climate change and how environmental change and resulting behavioural modifications have together altered economic, social and cultural fabric of Inuit communities.
650 07 ‡a3-055.2 -- Women.‡2udc
650 07 ‡a323.1 -- National and ethnic minorities: Inuit.‡2udc
650 07 ‡a36 -- Social welfare.‡2udc
650 07 ‡a364.122/.124 -- Social change and associated problems.‡2udc
650 07 ‡a39 -- Ethnography.‡2udc
650 07 ‡a113/119 -- Attitudes to nature.‡2udc
650 07 ‡a502 -- Environmental issues.‡2udc
650 07 ‡a551.583 -- Climatic changes.‡2udc
650 07 ‡aJ -- Social sciences.‡2local
651 #7 ‡a(*3) -- Arctic regions.‡2udc
651 #7 ‡a(*41) -- Canada.‡2udc
651 #7 ‡a(*440.2) -- Nunavut.‡2udc
773 0# ‡7nnas ‡tÉtudes Inuit = Inuit Studies. ‡gVol. 34(1) (2010) ‡wSPRI-56047
916 ## ‡a2010/12/23 -- JW
917 ## ‡aUnenhanced record from Muscat, imported 2019
948 3# ‡a20240416 ‡bJW