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Press Release Aid for the Andaman and Nicobar Islands - how social ecology can help A year after the tsunami devastated the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, wide-ranging field studies are helping to preserve the last remaining indigenous cultures. The tidal wave not only deprived the tribes of their livelihood, it also threatens to dispossess them of their cultural identity. Now a new Austrian Science Fund (FWF) project is using scientific methods to assist the islanders in opting for a culturally appropriate sustainable future. Not only did the tsunami claim thousands of lives but its aftermath now threatens to wipe out the last remaining indigenous cultures in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Contributions from the University of Klagenfurt, Institute for Social Ecology may be crucial to prevent this from happening. The objective is to assist in the reconstruction effort by analysing the use of land, materials and energy, information that will be useful for local decision-making. The insights gained from the project will help put the islands on an environmentally and socially sustainable path of development that takes account of the needs of the indigenous population. The hope is that the relief effort triggered by the tsunami will help to revive the culture of the indigenous population rather than causing further damage. Disaster response The situation could now be made worse still by well-intentioned attempts
to help by a modern world alien to the islanders. A large influx of ill-directed
money would have a catastrophic consequence for the culture of a people
that until now has subsisted on fishing, hunting, horticulture and coconut
trading. Aid that does not lead to a return to the original way of life
threatens to uproot them still further. Routes to the future Dr. Singh outlined the project schedule as follows: "During the first phase we will analyse the socio-ecological systems of the Andaman and Nicobar islands. Discussions with tribal representatives will enable the researchers to form a picture of the problems faced in the aftermath of the tsunami. The findings will help the research team to develop scenarios for the indigenous people's future, guide aid projects and to evaluate the outcomes." The research team can draw on a large body of work by Dr. Singh, who wrote an extensive account of the culture of the former Austrian colony of the Nicobar Islands before the tsunami, little imagining that the basis of their whole way of life would shortly be swept away. After the disaster Dr. Singh published an illustrated book, some 500 copies of which have been distributed among the Nicobarese. It is intended to give the population a wider range of options for reviving their culture. (http://www.czernin-verlag.com/czerninverlag/newsshow.xml?id=174) The research also advices the Sustainable Indigenous Futures (SIF) fund on the use of relief money to build a sustainable future for the tribes of the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago. The fund is an Austrian aid initiative set up by the Institute for Social Ecology in cooperation with André Heller's Austria for Asia initiative and Caritas Austria. The research project is being funded by the FWF, which will thus be making a contribution to saving one of the world's last remaining indigenous cultures. Scientific Contact Austrian Science Fund FWF Copy Editing & Distribution Vienna, 13th February 2006
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Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Haus der Forschung, Sensengasse 1, 1090 Vienna T +43-1-505 67 40 F +43-1-505 67 39 office@fwf.ac.at - www.fwf.ac.at |
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