Collaborative Research: Vulnerability and Resilience in Island Socioecosystems

合作研究:岛屿社会生态系统的脆弱性和恢复力

基本信息

  • 批准号:
    1029765
  • 负责人:
  • 金额:
    $ 14.65万
  • 依托单位:
  • 依托单位国家:
    美国
  • 项目类别:
    Continuing Grant
  • 财政年份:
    2010
  • 资助国家:
    美国
  • 起止时间:
    2010-08-15 至 2012-12-31
  • 项目状态:
    已结题

项目摘要

With National Science Foundation support, Drs. Jennifer Kahn and Patrick Kirch, assisted by an international team of collaborators, will conduct archaeological and paleoecological fieldwork on three islands of French Polynesia. The team brings together U.S., Australian, New Zealand, and French specialists in archaeology, paleoethnobotany, paleoecology, and soil science. They will examine island ecosystems and cultural responses to ecosystem change which led to radically transformed landscapes and emergent sociopolitical formations (chiefdoms) in Polynesia. Using a comparative approach, the project will study the island ecosystems of Mangareva, Mo'orea, and Maupiti. These three islands exhibit critical contrasts in island geology and age, geomorphology, size, and climate and marine resources; they vary significantly in the degree of socio-political hierarchy and integration; and they have existing archaeological and paleoecological data upon which the research can build. Applying the concept of islands as model systems, the project seeks to understand both the vulnerability of island ecosystems and their resilience to long-term human interactions with the landscape. The team will also investigate how socio-political systems responded to, and were affected by, such processes. All Polynesian societies trace their origins back to a common Ancestral Polynesian culture, yet diverse social systems evolved through time with marked differences in population densities, productive systems, and political structures. Thus, comparative archaeological research in Polynesia offers an especially clear opportunity to understand the emergence of complex socio-political organizations such as chiefdoms. The study will contribute to understanding how dynamic interactions between island populations and island environments allowed some Polynesian cultures to develop substantial resilience, and led others into states of high instability and vulnerability. The project will obtain basic data from former cultivation zones, monumental architecture sites, and coastal habitations with paleoecological records of island flora and fauna. These data will be used to understand: 1) interactions among human-induced landscape change; 2) shifts in settlement patterns; 3) changes in agricultural infrastructure and production; and, 4) levels of ideological control. The project will model how these variables influenced emerging social complexity, and how they affected long term adaptive cycles in island systems. The intellectual merit of the research includes testing models of how social complexity develops over time and examining how past societies adapted to challenges such as over-exploitation of resources and high population densities, two of the most contentious issues confronting contemporary archaeology and indeed, many current societies. The deeper understanding of interactions between island social systems, environments, and differential cultural responses to ecosystem change gained in this research will enhance current perspectives on sustainability and resilience.The broader impacts of the study include education, outreach, fostering international research collaboration and integration of natural and social sciences. The project involves collaboration among scholars and students from multiple institutions in the U.S., Australia, New Zealand, and French Polynesia and of diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The project team will offer critical training opportunities to students of Polynesian descent. The project emphasizes archaeology but is truly interdisciplinary, and will contribute more broadly to conceptual integration across the natural and social sciences.
在国家科学基金会的支持下,詹妮弗·卡恩博士和帕特里克·基尔奇博士将在一个国际合作者团队的协助下,在法属波利尼西亚的三个岛屿上进行考古和古生态实地考察。该团队汇集了美国、澳大利亚、新西兰和法国的考古学、古民族植物学、古生态学和土壤学专家。他们将研究岛屿生态系统和对生态系统变化的文化反应,生态系统变化导致波利尼西亚的地貌和新出现的社会政治形态(酋长领地)。该项目将采用比较的方法,研究曼加雷瓦岛、莫雷亚岛和毛皮提岛的生态系统。这三个岛屿在岛屿地质和年龄、地貌、大小、气候和海洋资源方面表现出严重的反差;它们在社会政治等级和一体化程度上有很大差异;它们拥有现有的考古和古生态数据,可以作为研究的基础。应用岛屿作为模型系统的概念,该项目试图了解岛屿生态系统的脆弱性及其对人类与景观长期互动的适应能力。该小组还将调查社会政治系统如何应对此类进程并受到其影响。所有波利尼西亚社会的起源都可以追溯到共同的祖先波利尼西亚文化,但随着时间的推移,不同的社会制度随着人口密度、生产制度和政治结构的显著差异而演变。因此,波利尼西亚的比较考古学研究提供了一个特别明确的机会来理解复杂的社会政治组织的出现,如酋长领地。这项研究将有助于理解岛屿人口和岛屿环境之间的动态互动如何使一些波利尼西亚文化发展出强大的复原力,并将其他文化带入高度不稳定和脆弱的状态。该项目将从以前的种植区、纪念性建筑遗址和具有岛屿动植物古生态记录的沿海栖息地获得基本数据。这些数据将被用来理解:1)人类引起的景观变化之间的相互作用;2)聚落模式的变化;3)农业基础设施和生产的变化;以及4)意识形态控制的水平。该项目将模拟这些变量如何影响新出现的社会复杂性,以及它们如何影响岛屿系统的长期适应周期。这项研究的学术价值包括测试社会复杂性如何随着时间的推移而发展的模型,以及研究过去的社会如何适应资源过度开发和高人口密度等挑战,这是当代考古学面临的两个最有争议的问题,实际上,许多当代社会也面临着这两个问题。这项研究加深了对岛屿社会制度、环境和对生态系统变化的不同文化反应之间相互作用的理解,这将加强当前关于可持续性和复原力的观点。这项研究的更广泛影响包括教育、推广、促进国际研究合作以及自然科学和社会科学的融合。该项目涉及来自美国、澳大利亚、新西兰和法属波利尼西亚多个机构的学者和学生之间的合作,他们具有不同的文化和种族背景。该项目团队将为波利尼西亚裔学生提供重要的培训机会。该项目强调考古学,但真正是跨学科的,并将更广泛地促进自然科学和社会科学的概念整合。

项目成果

期刊论文数量(0)
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Jennifer Kahn其他文献

Ancient mitogenomes of Lapita pigs confirm continuity of the Pacific Clade in Remote Oceania
拉皮塔猪的古代线粒体基因组证实了远大洋洲太平洋分支的连续性
  • DOI:
    10.1016/j.jasrep.2025.105292
  • 发表时间:
    2025-10-01
  • 期刊:
  • 影响因子:
    1.400
  • 作者:
    Meriam van Os;Melinda S. Allen;Stuart Bedford;Stuart Hawkins;Jennifer Kahn;Patrick Kirch;Michael Knapp;Patrick Nunn;Christophe Sand;Matthew Spriggs;Richard Walter;Elizabeth Matisoo-Smith;Karen Greig;Catherine Collins
  • 通讯作者:
    Catherine Collins
Stories From Islita Libre: Digital Spatial Storytelling as an Expression of Transnational and Immigrant Identities
Islita Libre 的故事:数字空间叙事作为跨国和移民身份的表达
  • DOI:
  • 发表时间:
    2022
  • 期刊:
  • 影响因子:
    0
  • 作者:
    Jennifer Kahn;Daryl Axelrod;Matthew Deroo;Svetlana Radojcic
  • 通讯作者:
    Svetlana Radojcic
“Then You go to Snap”: Multimodal Making of Digital Comics in a Language Arts High School Classroom
“然后你去 Snap”:语言艺术高中课堂上数字漫画的多模式制作

Jennifer Kahn的其他文献

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{{ truncateString('Jennifer Kahn', 18)}}的其他基金

Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: The Nature of Hinterland Communities
博士论文改进补助金:腹地社区的性质
  • 批准号:
    1935468
  • 财政年份:
    2019
  • 资助金额:
    $ 14.65万
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant
Doctoral Dissertation Research: An Investigation of Change and Continuity in Household Consumption in the Hinterlands of Early Nineteenth-Century Hawaii
博士论文研究:十九世纪初夏威夷腹地家庭消费的变化和连续性调查
  • 批准号:
    1730233
  • 财政年份:
    2017
  • 资助金额:
    $ 14.65万
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant
Collaborative Research: Vulnerability and Resilience in Island Socioecosystems
合作研究:岛屿社会生态系统的脆弱性和恢复力
  • 批准号:
    1301165
  • 财政年份:
    2012
  • 资助金额:
    $ 14.65万
  • 项目类别:
    Continuing Grant

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