Earth stewardship, water resilience, and ethics in the Anthropocene

IF 4.6 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Jeremy J. Schmidt
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Abstract

Non-technical summary This article uses water to examine how the relationships of ethics to science are modified through the pursuit of Earth stewardship. Earth stewardship is often defined as the use of science to actively shape social–ecological relations by enhancing resilience. The changing relations of science to values are explored by considering how ideas of resilience operate to translate different ways of knowing water into the framework of Earth stewardship. This is not a neutral process, and Earth stewardship requires careful appraisal to ensure other ways of knowing water are not oppressed. Technical summary Scientific disclosures of anthropogenic impacts on the Earth system – the Anthropocene – increasingly come with ethical diagnoses for value transformation and, often, Earth stewardship. This article examines the changing relationship of science to values in calls for Earth stewardship with special attention to water resilience. The article begins by situating recent efforts to reconceptualize human–water relations in view of anthropogenic impacts on the global water system. It then traces some of the ways that Earth stewardship has been articulated, especially as a framework supporting the use of science to actively shape social–ecological relations by enhancing resilience. The shift in relations of ethics and science entailed by Earth stewardship is placed in historical context before the issues of water resilience are examined. Resilience, and critiques of it, are then discussed for how they operate to translate different ways of knowing water into the framework of Earth stewardship. The ethical stakes of such translations are a core concern of the conclusion. Rather than reducing different ways of knowing water to those amendable to the framework of Earth stewardship, the article advances a pluralized approach as needed to respect multiple practices for knowing and relating to water – and resilience. Social media summary Water resilience is key to Earth stewardship; Jeremy Schmidt examines how it changes relations of science and ethics.
人类世的地球管理、水的复原力和伦理
非技术性摘要本文利用水来研究伦理与科学的关系是如何通过追求地球管理而改变的。地球管理通常被定义为利用科学通过增强韧性来积极塑造社会-生态关系。科学与价值观之间不断变化的关系是通过考虑弹性思想如何将了解水的不同方式转化为地球管理的框架来探索的。这不是一个中立的过程,地球管理需要仔细评估,以确保其他了解水的方式不会受到压迫。技术摘要人类世对地球系统的人为影响的科学披露越来越多地伴随着价值转变的伦理诊断,通常还有地球管理。这篇文章探讨了科学与价值观之间不断变化的关系,呼吁对地球进行管理,特别关注水的恢复力。文章首先介绍了最近从人为影响全球水系统的角度重新定义人与水关系的努力。然后,它追溯了地球管理的一些方式,特别是作为一个框架,支持利用科学通过增强韧性来积极塑造社会-生态关系。在研究水的复原力问题之前,地球管理所带来的伦理和科学关系的转变被置于历史背景下。然后讨论了韧性及其批评,以及它们如何将了解水的不同方式转化为地球管理的框架。这类翻译的伦理利害关系是结论的核心问题。这篇文章没有将了解水的不同方式减少到那些可以修改为地球管理框架的方式,而是根据需要提出了一种多元化的方法,以尊重了解水和与水相关的多种实践——以及复原力。社交媒体摘要水的复原力是地球管理的关键;Jeremy Schmidt研究了它如何改变科学和伦理的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Global Sustainability
Global Sustainability Environmental Science-Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
CiteScore
10.90
自引率
3.60%
发文量
19
审稿时长
17 weeks
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