The Sovereign Table: Embedding Knowledge Infrastructure within a Tribal Homeland

Item

Title
The Sovereign Table: Embedding Knowledge Infrastructure within a Tribal Homeland
Description
As climate change exacerbates the consequences of Western land and resource mismanagement, landscape architects are increasingly soliciting traditional ecological knowledge (TEK). This thesis calls landscape architects to resist the exploitation of TEK and join efforts to decolonize public land. A Sovereign Table challenges the ongoing eco-ethnocide in the Klamath River Basin by proposing a new “Land Back” form that supports tribal biocultural sovereignty while fostering intra-basin co-stewardship. Funding designated for basin restoration from the Infrastructure Investments and Jobs Act shifts co-stewardship decision-making from federal space to sovereign tribal land. Monuments of colonization are then reconfigured into a physical knowledge infrastructure network that invites tribal, local, and federal stakeholders into a co-stewardship relationship. By making space for knowledge negotiation and creation, while making visible biocultural processes, the Bio-Cultural Sovereignty Area encourages ideological barriers to splinter and supports the creation of symbiotic, basin-specific co-stewardship.
Creator
Vought, Morgan Elizabeth
Contributor
Perez-Ramos, Pablo
Davis, Diane
Date
2022-05-24T04:06:45Z
2022
2022-05-23
2022-05
2022-05-24T04:06:45Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Vought, Morgan Elizabeth. 2022. The Sovereign Table: Embedding Knowledge Infrastructure within a Tribal Homeland. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
29212187
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37371703
Language
en