--- - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Clayton, S.; Manning, C.M.; Hodge, C.' Pages: 51 Place Published: 'Washington, D.C.' Publisher: American Psychological Association and ecoAmerica Title: 'Beyond Storms & Droughts: The Psychological Impacts of Climate Change' URL: http://ecoamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/eA_Beyond_Storms_and_Droughts_Psych_Impacts_of_Climate_Change.pdf Year: 2014 _record_number: 18074 _uuid: f66b946f-c672-4a4b-8f71-1b05738e029e reftype: Report child_publication: /report/apa-ecoamerica-beyond-storms-2014 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f66b946f-c672-4a4b-8f71-1b05738e029e.yaml identifier: f66b946f-c672-4a4b-8f71-1b05738e029e uri: /reference/f66b946f-c672-4a4b-8f71-1b05738e029e - attrs: Author: 'Pierotti, Raymond; Wildcat, Daniel' DOI: '10.1890/1051-0761(2000)010[1333:TEKTTA]2.0.CO;2' ISSN: 1939-5582 Issue: 5 Journal: Ecological Applications Keywords: belief system; conservation; ecology; environment; Indian; indigenous; Native American; resource management; Traditional Ecological Knowledge Pages: 1333-1340 Publisher: Ecological Society of America Title: 'Traditional ecological knowledge: The third alternative (commentary)' Volume: 10 Year: 2000 _record_number: 24924 _uuid: f7989118-acd5-4681-ba87-d780c2f96609 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1890/1051-0761(2000)010%5B1333:TEKTTA%5D2.0.CO;2 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f7989118-acd5-4681-ba87-d780c2f96609.yaml identifier: f7989118-acd5-4681-ba87-d780c2f96609 uri: /reference/f7989118-acd5-4681-ba87-d780c2f96609 - attrs: Abstract: 'For Indigenous communities, protecting traditional lands and waters is of the utmost importance. In the U.S. context, scholars have documented an unfortunate neglect of water quality on tribal lands. Treatment as a State (TAS) provisions, adopted in the 1987 amendments to the Clean Water Act, and tribal Water Quality Standards (WQSs) programs are intended to address such problems. Importantly, tribal WQSs may be more stringent than neighboring state standards, and can be used to influence pollution levels coming from upstream, off-reservation users. Tribes can also develop WQSs that support unique tribal values, including ceremonial and cultural uses of native waters. Yet scholarly debates question whether tribal environmental self-determination strategies can fully succeed within dominant regulatory structures. Based on a synthesis of the published literature, this article examines tribal WQSs as a case of tribal environmental self-determination. The author discusses how U.S. tribes pursue WQSs under TAS, program outcomes, and why so few tribes have established WQSs to date. Because most scholarship was found within the legal literature, the author focuses on the legal and political outcomes that arise from tribal WQSs, and analyzes specific opportunities and constraints for program participants. The author also considers how some tribes use WQSs as a “third space” strategy—simultaneously working inside and outside of dominant government structures to advance tribal sovereignty (Bruyneel ). Additional research is needed to understand the diversity of tribal environmental self-determination strategies that occur through federal regulatory frameworks and under tribal law.' Author: 'Diver, Sibyl' DOI: 10.1111/j.1936-704X.2018.03267.x Issue: 1 Journal: Journal of Contemporary Water Research & Education Pages: 6-30 Title: 'Native water protection flows through self-determination: Understanding tribal water quality standards and “Treatment as a State”' Volume: 163 Year: 2018 _record_number: 25997 _uuid: f9dc41ed-234a-46f2-a08d-472c44c6c97b reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1936-704X.2018.03267.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f9dc41ed-234a-46f2-a08d-472c44c6c97b.yaml identifier: f9dc41ed-234a-46f2-a08d-472c44c6c97b uri: /reference/f9dc41ed-234a-46f2-a08d-472c44c6c97b - attrs: Editor: 'McNutt, Deborah' Pages: 15 Place Published: 'Olympia, WA' Title: 'Northwest tribes: Meeting the challenge of climate change.' URL: http://osupress.oregonstate.edu/sites/default/files/climatechangebooklet.pdf Year: 2009 _record_number: 24983 _uuid: fbfe908f-96b8-4926-99ff-d2ae5f2eee33 reftype: Edited Report child_publication: /report/northwest-tribes-meeting-challenge-climate-change href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/fbfe908f-96b8-4926-99ff-d2ae5f2eee33.yaml identifier: fbfe908f-96b8-4926-99ff-d2ae5f2eee33 uri: /reference/fbfe908f-96b8-4926-99ff-d2ae5f2eee33 - attrs: Academic Department: Anthropology Author: 'Maldonado, Julie Koppel' Degree: Ph.D. Number of Pages: 295 Title: 'Facing the Rising Tide: Co-occurring Disasters, Displacement, and Adaptation in Coastal Louisiana’s Tribal Communities' URL: https://dra.american.edu/islandora/object/thesesdissertations%3A366/datastream/PDF/view University: American University Year: 2014 _record_number: 24982 _uuid: fdf0847b-c387-4a96-8424-7b6d03cfdc7f reftype: Thesis child_publication: /generic/3169930f-633d-41f3-b0e1-217e0e00a05e href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/fdf0847b-c387-4a96-8424-7b6d03cfdc7f.yaml identifier: fdf0847b-c387-4a96-8424-7b6d03cfdc7f uri: /reference/fdf0847b-c387-4a96-8424-7b6d03cfdc7f