Title

Diversity, Resiliency, And Ihope-Maya: Using The Past To Inform The Present

Keywords

Archaeology; Maya; Resilience; Sustainability; Vulnerability

Abstract

How can the past inform the present? Archaeologists working though IHOPE-Maya seek to address this question by using archaeological data and ecological reconstructions to explore human-nature couplings. Maya archaeologists are revitalizing and contemporizing the field to focus on issues relevant today: the socio-natural boundary and the coupled human-nature dynamic. The ancient Maya occupied a diverse range of tropical environments that permits a comparative exploration of past permutations in adaptive responses and may also be instructive concerning issues of overexploitation. The variety of places that the Maya occupied afforded diverse opportunities and constraints. By providing access to long-term historical interactions between peoples and their landscapes, archaeology is uniquely qualified to define, examine, and interpret topics like sustainability, resilience, and vulnerability that are as equally significant to the past as they are to the present. Because Maya archaeology is well positioned to analyze ancient variability in political structures and cultural adaptations that can be related to differential societal success and decline, the discipline can contribute to broader, more current, debates concerning climate change, population limits, urban forms, landscape modifications, and stability. The research being undertaken by IHOPE-Maya hopes to serve as a catalyst for transforming the field.

Publication Date

3-1-2014

Publication Title

Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association

Volume

24

Issue

1

Number of Pages

1-10

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1111/apaa.12025

Socpus ID

84927521338 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84927521338

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