For thirty years of I have conducted ethnographic research with Viliui Sakha of Northeastern Siberia Russia. Since 2005, my central focus has been on Viliui Sakha’s perceptions, understandings, and responses to anthropogenic climate change. My biggest news is the recent publication of my monograph, featured below. Following that I have information on my Sakha research. In recent years I have also initiated projects in other world areas where communities are similarly challenged by climate change.

Once Upon the Permafrost: Knowing Culture and Climate Change in Siberia.

University of Arizona Press

In 2021 I published Once Upon the Permafrost: Knowing Culture and Climate Change in Siberia (University of Arizona Press). The book is a culmination of my longitudinal ethnography with Sakha. In the book I reveal Sakha’s essential relationship with alaas, the foundational permafrost ecosystem of both their subsistence and cultural identity. Sakha know alaas via an Indigenous knowledge system imbued with spiritual qualities. This counters the scientific definition of alaas as geophysical phenomena of limited range. Climate change now threatens alaas due to thawing permafrost, which, entangled with the rural changes of economic globalization, youth out-migration, and language loss, make prescient the issues of ethnic sovereignty and cultural survival.

Through careful integration of contemporary narratives, on-site observations, and document analysis, I argue that local understandings of change and the vernacular knowledge systems they are founded on provide critical information for interdisciplinary collaboration and effective policy prescriptions.

Furthermore, I make my message relevant to a wider audience by clarifying linkages to the global permafrost system found in her comparative research in Mongolia, Arctic Canada, Kiribati, Peru, and Chesapeake Bay, Virginia. This reveals how permafrost provides one of the main structural foundations for Arctic ecosystems, which, in turn, work with the planet’s other ecosystems to maintain planetary balance.

Metaphorically speaking, we all live on permafrost.

Research with Viliui Sakha Communities

  • Early Research 1992-2005

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  • Observations, Perceptions and Responses to Climate Change 2005-2013

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  • Permafrost

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