Dove, M. R. (2006). Indigenous people and environmental politics. Annu. Rev. Anthropol., 35, 191-208.
Modernity has helped to popularize, and at the same time threaten,
indigeneity. Anthropologists question both the validity of the con-
cept of indigeneity and the wisdom of employing it as a political tool,
but they are reluctant to deny it to local communities, whose use
of the concept has become subject to study. The concept of indige-
nous knowledge is similarly faulted in favor of the hybrid products of
modernity, and the idea of indigenous environmental knowledge and
conservation is heatedly contested. Possibilities for alternate envi-
ronmentalisms, and the combining of conservation and development
goals, are being debated and tested in integrated conservation and
development projects and extractive reserves. Anthropological un-
derstanding of both state and community agency is being rethought,
and new approaches to the study of collaboration, indigenous rights
movements, and violence are being developed. These and other cur-
rent topics of interest involving indigenous peoples challenge an-
thropological theory as well as ethics and suggest the importance of
analyzing the contradictions inherent in the coevolution of science,
society, and environment.