Collaborative care in environmental governance: restoring reciprocal relations and community self-determination

IF 3.6 2区 社会学 Q1 ECOLOGY
Sibyl Diver, Mehana Blaich Vaughan, Merrill Baker-Medard
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Abstract

From communities rooted in place to transnational coalitions, this special feature applies concepts of collaborative care rooted in Indigenous knowledge systems to the field of environmental governance. We highlight restorative, liberatory practices rooted in caretaking ethics and reciprocal human-nature relations. Our approach also centers decision making by those most connected to a given resource and the sustenance it provides. Despite global extraction, dispossession, and other colonial legacies, these efforts build toward collective action and community self-determination, both through formal policy change and informal practices. Three facets of collaborative care in environmental governance are threaded through the special feature: (1) care in place, (2) care in power, and (3) care in commoning. These themes connect both Indigenous-led and allied scholarship from the United States to the Netherlands, Japan to Madagascar, and Aotearoa to Canada. Though diverse in their interests and challenges, the authors and communities featured in this research build toward collective action and community self-determination in caring for the places that are the source of collective abundance.

The post Collaborative care in environmental governance: restoring reciprocal relations and community self-determination first appeared on Ecology & Society.

环境治理中的协作关怀:恢复互惠关系和社区自决
从植根于当地的社区到跨国联盟,本特刊将植根于土著知识体系的协作关怀概念应用于环境治理领域。我们强调植根于看护伦理和人与自然互惠关系的恢复性、解放性实践。我们的方法还以那些与特定资源及其提供的养料关系最密切的人为决策中心。尽管存在全球榨取、剥夺和其他殖民遗留问题,但这些努力通过正式的政策变革和非正式的实践,朝着集体行动和社区自决的方向发展。环境治理中的合作关怀有三个方面贯穿本特辑:(1) 就地关怀,(2) 权力关怀,(3) 共同关怀。从美国到荷兰,从日本到马达加斯加,从奥特亚罗亚到加拿大,这些主题将土著主导的学术研究和联盟学术研究联系在一起。尽管利益和挑战各不相同,但本研究中的作者和社区在关爱作为集体富足之源的地方时,都朝着集体行动和社区自决的方向发展。
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来源期刊
Ecology and Society
Ecology and Society 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
4.90%
发文量
109
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Ecology and Society is an electronic, peer-reviewed, multi-disciplinary journal devoted to the rapid dissemination of current research. Manuscript submission, peer review, and publication are all handled on the Internet. Software developed for the journal automates all clerical steps during peer review, facilitates a double-blind peer review process, and allows authors and editors to follow the progress of peer review on the Internet. As articles are accepted, they are published in an "Issue in Progress." At four month intervals the Issue-in-Progress is declared a New Issue, and subscribers receive the Table of Contents of the issue via email. Our turn-around time (submission to publication) averages around 350 days. We encourage publication of special features. Special features are comprised of a set of manuscripts that address a single theme, and include an introductory and summary manuscript. The individual contributions are published in regular issues, and the special feature manuscripts are linked through a table of contents and announced on the journal''s main page. The journal seeks papers that are novel, integrative and written in a way that is accessible to a wide audience that includes an array of disciplines from the natural sciences, social sciences, and the humanities concerned with the relationship between society and the life-supporting ecosystems on which human wellbeing ultimately depends.
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