Navigating overgrazing and cultural values through narratives and participatory mapping: a socio-cultural analysis of sheep grazing in the Faroe Islands

IF 5.3 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
L. Verbrugge, G. Bjarnason, Nora Fagerholm, E. Magnussen, Lis E. Mortensen, E. Olsen, T. Plieninger, C. Raymond, A. S. Olafsson
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

ABSTRACT Long-term livestock grazing has shaped landscapes, biodiversity, societies, cultures, and economies in the North Atlantic over time. However, overgrazing has become a major environmental sustainability challenge for this region, covering the Faroe Islands, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, and Scotland. The objective of this study was to elicit narratives and spatial patterns of local people’s management preferences for sheep grazing in the Faroe Islands through a socio-cultural lens. We collected data via a Public Participation Geographic Information Systems (PPGIS) survey with an open question about hopes and concerns for sheep management in the Faroe Islands and a mapping exercise for expressing spatial preferences for sheep management. Four distinct narratives emerged from a qualitative analysis of responses to the open question (n = 184): (1) Sustainable sheep management, (2) Nature without sheep, (3) Sheep as part of Faroese culture, and (4) Sheep as nuisance. Visual inspection of narrative-specific maps with locations where either no or fewer sheep were preferred indicated that sheep management is not simply a ’sheep vs. no sheep’ issue but embedded in a more nuanced consideration of the place of sheep in the landscape and society. For example, for some residents sheep-farming is not a commercial enterprise but a social activity and local source of food. Our combined methodological approach using qualitative and spatial data can help researchers in other fields identify the interplay between place-specific areas of grazing management concern and socio-cultural values, enabling more targeted land-use management policies or plans.
通过叙述和参与式绘图导航过度放牧和文化价值:法罗群岛放牧羊的社会文化分析
随着时间的推移,长期的牲畜放牧塑造了北大西洋的景观、生物多样性、社会、文化和经济。然而,过度放牧已成为该地区(包括法罗群岛、格陵兰岛、冰岛、挪威和苏格兰)面临的主要环境可持续性挑战。本研究的目的是通过社会文化视角,引出法罗群岛当地人对放牧羊的管理偏好的叙述和空间模式。我们通过公众参与地理信息系统(PPGIS)调查收集数据,该调查包含一个关于在法罗群岛羊管理的希望和关注的开放性问题,并通过绘制地图来表达对羊管理的空间偏好。从对公开问题(n = 184)的回答的定性分析中出现了四种不同的叙述:(1)可持续的羊管理,(2)没有羊的自然,(3)羊是法罗文化的一部分,(4)羊是讨厌的东西。通过对特定叙事地图的视觉检查,可以发现羊的管理不仅仅是“羊vs.没有羊”的问题,而是对羊在景观和社会中的位置的更细致的考虑。例如,对一些居民来说,养羊不是商业企业,而是一种社会活动和当地的食物来源。我们采用定性和空间数据相结合的方法可以帮助其他领域的研究人员确定特定地点的放牧管理关注区域与社会文化价值之间的相互作用,从而制定更有针对性的土地使用管理政策或计划。
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来源期刊
Ecosystems and People
Ecosystems and People Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
11.30%
发文量
40
审稿时长
42 weeks
期刊介绍: Ecosystems and People is an interdisciplinary journal that addresses how biodiversity and ecosystems underpin human quality of life, and how societal activities and preferences drive changes in ecosystems. Research published in Ecosystems and People addresses human-nature relationships and social-ecological systems in a broad sense. This embraces research on biodiversity, ecosystem services, their contributions to quality of life, implications for equity and justice, and the diverse and rich ways in which people relate to nature.
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