Session Details

[S11-S12-O]S11:Indigenous Food Security, Sovereignty, and Lifeways in the Northern Communities / S12:Food Sovereignty and Food Security in the Arctic

Tue. Oct 28, 2025 4:30 PM - 6:00 PM JST
Tue. Oct 28, 2025 7:30 AM - 9:00 AM UTC
Room 1
Chair: Jun Akamine (Hitotsubashi University)
S11: This session invites projects relating to Indigenous food security, sovereignty, and lifeways due to climate and socioeconomic changes in the Arctic and sub-Arctic communities and its related areas and from local/Indigenous perspectives. Indigenous food sovereignty topics in this session includes relationships between humans and non-humans, cultural skills of harvesting, sharing, and storing food, Indigenous knowledge of the land, and how northern communities have maintained their lifeways while adapting to these changes wrought by colonialism and other factors.
S12: The Arctic's ecological, cultural, and geopolitical significance faces rapid changes from global warming, increased connectivity, and shifting political dynamics, affecting food sovereignty and security. Food sovereignty refers to the right to shape and manage food systems, emphasizing local production, cultural traditions, and environmental sustainability. For Arctic Indigenous populations, it highlights ancestral wisdom, subsistence practices, and foraging, crucial to cultural identity and self-determination. In contrast, food security ensures access to adequate, safe, and nutritious food for a healthy lifestyle, evaluated by availability, accessibility, utilization, and stability. Arctic food security is shaped by environmental, economic, and social factors. This discussion explores the relationship between food sovereignty and security, underscoring their importance in addressing sustainability, fairness, and resilience in the Arctic.

[S11-S12-O-11]Significance of poverty, well-being and environmental problems among Northern Indigenous Peoples: Evidence from socioeconomic and nutritional surveys in Yakutia

*Shokhrukh Khasanov1, Daichi Yamada2, Daiju Narita3, Tuyara Gavrilyeva4, Varvara Parilova5, Jorge García Molinos6 (1. Faculty of Economics and Business, Hokkaido University (Japan), 2. Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Hiroshima University (Japan), 3. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo (Japan), 4. Arctic Research Center of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Yakutsk (Russia), 5. Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Tohoku University (Japan), 6. Arctic Research Center, Hokkaido University (Japan))

[S11-S12-O-12]Future redistribution of wild food species and current dependencies of rural communities on wild food harvesting in the Sakha Republic (Russian Far East)

*JORGE GARCIA MOLINOS1, Daichi Yamada2, Varvara Parilova3, Shokhrukh Khasanov1, Viacheslav Gabyshev4, Andrey Makarov5, Daiju Narita6, Innokentiy Okhlopkov4, Zhixin Zhang7, Stephen C. Sakapaji1, Tuyara Gavrilyeva5 (1. Hokkaido Univ. (Japan), 2. Hiroshima Univ. (Japan), 3. Tohoku Univ. (Japan), 4. Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Russia), 5. North-Eastern Federal Univ. (Russia), 6. The Univ. of Tokyo (Japan), 7. Chinese Academy of Sciences (China))

[S11-S12-O-13]Food Sovereignty and Cultural Identity: Observations on the Ainu Foodways

*Sidney Chin Hung Cheung1 (1. The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Hong Kong))

[S11-S12-O-14]Dividing the Bear as a Gift from the Mountain Deity: Food-Sharing Practices and Contemporary Transformations in the Matagi Society of Northern Japan

*Kaito Matsuura1 (1. Graduate School of Social Sciences, Hitotsubashi University (Japan))

General discussion