73 or political boundaries, shared resources or knowledge, concerns or views about shared threats or opportunities, and shared visions, aims, or plans. All communities are dynamic. Discussions of self-definition and changing identities should not be seen as either new or inherently threatening to traditional institutions. The broader aim is to mobilize people around shared identities, visions, and plans and empower them to address both threats and opportunities emerging from interactions with external actors. The following boxes provide guiding questions for discussion in order to define and communicate who and what comprises the community. Defining Community  How do you define your community? How do you decide who is included in and excluded? This self-definition may include more than one of the examples outlined above, including within different contexts, or other characteristics entirely.  What is the story about the origins or history of your community? What is its significance for your present way of life?  What are your community’s core values? What is their significance for your present way of life? Communicating Community  Within your community, how are identity and core values passed on and reinforced? How are they conveyed to outsiders? Is anyone in particular responsible for these processes? How have they changed over time?  How could these processes be drawn on to communicate your identity and core values in the community protocol? COMMUNITY EXPERIENCE: Defining ‘Community’ through Shared Identity as Traditional Health Practitioners in South Africa Resource: Biocultural Protocol of the Traditional Health Practitioners of Bushbuckridge (available at www.community-protocols.org under “Community Protocols”) In the area of Bushbuckridge, South Africa, traditional health practitioners contribute greatly their villages’ health and wellbeing. However, their traditional knowledge and practices are being undermined by outside pressures such as the degradation of medicinal plants. A group spread across a large number of villages and from two different language groups came together to define themselves as a community of traditional health practitioners. They did this to assert their rights under a new national law and to seek recognition of and support for their shared knowledge and customary practices. B. MAPPING THE COMMUNITY’S NATURAL FOUNDATIONS KEY READING  Part I: Section III  Part II: Section II (Introduction, Box 35-36) KEY TOOLS  Identifying appropriate forms of resource mapping  Community institutions sketch map  Community biodiversity registers        Historical timeline Trend line analysis Community visioning Assessing key opportunities and threats Participatory video Photo stories Audio interviews The following boxes contain guiding questions for community discussion about their ways of life in relation to territories and areas. Some of the topics may not be relevant (for example, if the community does not keep livestock), so you may wish to read through them all first before beginning. In the

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