ABSTRACT

A turn to Indigeneity is a common and welcome theme in foundational texts and moments in the development of ecological law. Nevertheless, this chapter examines the risk of falling into archetypes or myths of the “ecological Indian.” In tracking the debate about sustainability and conservation in ethnobiology, the chapter challenges scholars and proponents of ecological law to engage with Indigenous knowledges in a way that embeds knowledges in the polities and legal orders of Indigenous peoples and is sensitive to the complexities of the cosmopolitics involved in negotiating understanding and action across different lifeworlds. This certainly means contending with the colonial context in which Indigenous knowledge in relation to “the environment” emerges, and situating Indigenous peoples themselves as key actors in the move to ecological law; it may also mean questioning or recalibrating what it means to be ecocentric, to respect all life forms or to be interconnected with them.