Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) represent cumulative, place-based bodies of understanding, practice, and belief, evolved through symbiotic relationships between cultural communities and their environments. This paper argues that IKS are not merely alternative knowledge forms but are critical, untapped reservoirs for innovation in the global pursuit of sustainability. Moving beyond tokenistic inclusion, it positions IKS engagement as a transdisciplinary imperative—a necessary integration of indigenous and scientific knowledge paradigms to address complex socio-ecological challenges. The paper systematically explores research and innovation opportunities across key domains: biodiversity conservation and agroecology; climate change adaptation and resilience; medicinal knowledge and bioprospecting; sustainable water and land management; and governance models for socio-ecological systems. It identifies methodological frameworks for ethical, equitable, and reciprocal co-creation of knowledge, emphasizing protocols for Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC) and intellectual property rights. The central thesis is that a transdisciplinary approach, which respects the integrity and contextuality of IKS while fostering dialogue with Western science, can yield holistic, culturally-grounded, and scalable solutions. The paper concludes that leveraging IKS for sustainable development requires a paradigm shift in research governance, funding, and education to support partnership-based innovation that contributes to both global sustainability goals and the revitalization of indigenous communities and their knowledge sovereignty.
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Laxmi
Seva Mandir
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Laxmi (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/697703f6722626c4468e8fd0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17967317
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