African indigenous knowledge (AIK) for environmental management and sustainable development: the role of Yoruba epistemology

Anthropological expeditions across traditional communities in Africa acknowledged human practices evolved over several years. These practices have been long certified as reliable and sustainable in preventing and mitigating the impacts of disasters. This paper interrogates some African practices whi...

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Main Author: Olawale R. Olaopa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-12-01
Series:Cogent Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2455775
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author Olawale R. Olaopa
author_facet Olawale R. Olaopa
author_sort Olawale R. Olaopa
collection DOAJ
description Anthropological expeditions across traditional communities in Africa acknowledged human practices evolved over several years. These practices have been long certified as reliable and sustainable in preventing and mitigating the impacts of disasters. This paper interrogates some African practices which have spiritual inclinations and deep cultural relationships with environment and its sustainability. A qualitative research approach which literarily explores the evolutionary origins of IK was employed. This is done within the framework of African traditions and value systems to provide a strategy for mainstreaming IK in disaster management. It draws insight from cultural relativism theory as a theoretical framework that guides data analysis and interpretation. Existing literature and historical documents were the major method used in the analysis. The results showed that some African environmental practices were insufficiently researched and undocumented. The implications of such practices on sustainable development are not deeply understood and acknowledged. It is then concluded that this hinders easy integration and an all-inclusive approach to disaster management that associates IK with contemporary techniques in solving environmental problems for maximum sustainability and harnessing development opportunities. It then provides a strategy for mainstreaming IK in environmental management efforts by all stakeholders globally for harnessing symbiotic disaster-development opportunities synergy.
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spelling doaj-art-d9de2f3e7a99486ca47774eb985d5da92025-01-29T15:55:42ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Social Sciences2331-18862025-12-0111110.1080/23311886.2025.2455775African indigenous knowledge (AIK) for environmental management and sustainable development: the role of Yoruba epistemologyOlawale R. Olaopa0Department of Economics, College of Business Administration, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Kingdom of Saudi ArabiaAnthropological expeditions across traditional communities in Africa acknowledged human practices evolved over several years. These practices have been long certified as reliable and sustainable in preventing and mitigating the impacts of disasters. This paper interrogates some African practices which have spiritual inclinations and deep cultural relationships with environment and its sustainability. A qualitative research approach which literarily explores the evolutionary origins of IK was employed. This is done within the framework of African traditions and value systems to provide a strategy for mainstreaming IK in disaster management. It draws insight from cultural relativism theory as a theoretical framework that guides data analysis and interpretation. Existing literature and historical documents were the major method used in the analysis. The results showed that some African environmental practices were insufficiently researched and undocumented. The implications of such practices on sustainable development are not deeply understood and acknowledged. It is then concluded that this hinders easy integration and an all-inclusive approach to disaster management that associates IK with contemporary techniques in solving environmental problems for maximum sustainability and harnessing development opportunities. It then provides a strategy for mainstreaming IK in environmental management efforts by all stakeholders globally for harnessing symbiotic disaster-development opportunities synergy.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2455775African traditionsculturaldisaster-development opportunitiesindigenous knowledgesustainable developmentDevelopment Studies
spellingShingle Olawale R. Olaopa
African indigenous knowledge (AIK) for environmental management and sustainable development: the role of Yoruba epistemology
Cogent Social Sciences
African traditions
cultural
disaster-development opportunities
indigenous knowledge
sustainable development
Development Studies
title African indigenous knowledge (AIK) for environmental management and sustainable development: the role of Yoruba epistemology
title_full African indigenous knowledge (AIK) for environmental management and sustainable development: the role of Yoruba epistemology
title_fullStr African indigenous knowledge (AIK) for environmental management and sustainable development: the role of Yoruba epistemology
title_full_unstemmed African indigenous knowledge (AIK) for environmental management and sustainable development: the role of Yoruba epistemology
title_short African indigenous knowledge (AIK) for environmental management and sustainable development: the role of Yoruba epistemology
title_sort african indigenous knowledge aik for environmental management and sustainable development the role of yoruba epistemology
topic African traditions
cultural
disaster-development opportunities
indigenous knowledge
sustainable development
Development Studies
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2455775
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