Conserving Local Knowledge In Traditional Healing Through Knowledge Transfer
Local knowledge (LK) basically refers to the knowledge that people in a given community have developed over time, and continues to develop, through practices and based on experiences. Local beliefs pertaining to ilmu, a central concept in Malay culture that refers to knowledge, is essential among...
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
EDP Sciences
2015
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://eprints.usm.my/38490/1/Conserving_Local_Knowledge_in_Traditional_Healing_through_Knowledge_Transfer.pdf http://eprints.usm.my/38490/ https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20151804003 |
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Summary: | Local knowledge (LK) basically refers to the knowledge that people in a given community have
developed over time, and continues to develop, through practices and based on experiences. Local
beliefs pertaining to ilmu, a central concept in Malay culture that refers to knowledge, is essential
among the traditional healers. The vast repository of knowledge and its relevance to locality and local
situation makes the conservation of LK a necessity.However, due to the dominance of modern
knowledge, diminished inter-generational knowledge transfer has led to LK being threatened with
extinction. The fact that LK is practiced by only a few these days could be due to lack of knowledge
transfer to the younger generations from the traditional healers who are knowledgeable in the
communities. The common transfer mode of local knowledge, usually via words of mouth, may not be
sustainable because the LK could vanish when knowledgeable elders die before it is transferred or
during resettlements of individuals or communities. The need to conserve LK through knowledge
transfer is also pertinent for the continued sustenance of their culture by recognizing, protecting and
enforcing the rights of local communities to have continued access to biological resources as well as
by protecting their LK, acquired over thousand of years of experimentation and experience, about the
uses of these biological resources in traditional healing. Therefore, it is important to have a governance
framework to effectively protect this LK of the local communities for the continued sustenance of their
culture. This conceptual paper attempts to highlight the significance of conserving LK in traditional
healing via effective knowledge transfer method, which should thereafter be translated into a working
governance framework that protects the knowledge as well as the holders of such knowledge. |
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