| TAJIKISTAN - The glaciers of the Pamir mountains, which provide over 50% of Central Asia's water resources, are rapidly melting at a rate similar to Greenland's continental glacier. Three generations of of Pamiri women share the impacts of the melt and decreasing water levels. Director/Camera/Editor: Ivan Golovnev Producer/Editor: Citt Williams Associate Producers: Professor Abdulsator Saidov, Dr. Abdulnazar Abdulnazarov Graphics: David Jimenez Sound Mixer: Tfer Newsome Shot on location in Pamir mountains, Tajikistan Duration 10:09 minutes Developed and produced for United Nations University (UNU) by UNU Media Studio & Institute of Zoology and Parasitology -Tajikistan Academy of Sciences, in association with UNU-IAS Traditional knowledge Initiative and The Christensen Fund. Further information, for this film can be found at film's website: ourworld.unu.edu United Nations University has published this work under a Creative Commons license - share alike, attribution, no derivatives, non-commercial *About this Project* The United Nations University together with Aleine Ecological movement of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan's Academy of Sciences - Institute of Zoology and Parasitology, and Foundation of sustainable development of Altai, collaborated as partners in the coordination, production and dissemination of 3 short videos dealing with Central Asian Indigenous Perspectives on Climate Change. Collaboratively made with Indigenous storytellers, the videobriefs are told in local ... |