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Indigenous Ways of Doing: Synthesizing the Literature on Ethno-Engineering
Author(s) -
Justin L. Hess,
Johannes Ströbel
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
international journal of engineering social justice and peace
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1927-9434
DOI - 10.24908/ijesjp.v2i2.4333
Subject(s) - indigenous , praxis , expansive , oppression , traditional knowledge , conversation , coding (social sciences) , sociology , engineering , political science , social science , law , ecology , politics , compressive strength , materials science , communication , composite material , biology
This paper synthesizes the literature on indigenous ways of doing, what we call ethno-engineering . Indigenous societies have faced countless years of oppression at the hands of Western colonization and assimilation. Western literature on indigenous knowledge is expansive, yet a deliberate focal point on ethno-engineering in indigenous literature is missing. In this paper, we have collected literature on indigenous knowledge and synthesized articles specifically on ethno-engineering, setting the papers in contrast to Western-engineering praxis. Our literature review methods proceeded in two phases. During the first phase we accumulated relevant sources (N=87), compiled these in a database, and coded these with a 10-item coding framework. In the second phase, we sampled literature from the initial database (N=31) and coded these items more extensively using an inductively developed coding scheme. Our intent was to contribute to a starting conversation on indigenous engineering bringing it to forefront of social justice/engineering discourse.

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