Sustainability Knowledge Politics: Southeast Asia, Europe and the Transregional History of Palm Oil Sustainability Research

IF 0.3 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Evelien de Hoop, Erik van der Vleuten
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Abstract

So far, the field of sustainability history has insufficiently addressed the tricky politics of academic sustainability knowledge making. In response, this paper studies how scientific research on palm oil sustainability, when defining sustainability problems and solutions, enacted a postcolonial politics of difference between Southeast Asia and Europe. Iterating between quantitative database queries (2,500+ sources) and close reading, we found that voices of scientists from both regions were amply represented in palm oil sustainability research, but presented different types of narratives. Research originating from Southeast Asia predominantly foregrounded situated problems originating, experienced and to be redressed within the region itself. By contrast, diverse strands of research led by scholars from Europe addressed universalised global sustainability problems for humanity, notably global deforestation and climate change. This research framed palm oil farmers in Southeast Asia as responsible for causing and solving such problems while attributing to European actors the responsibility of ensuring Southeast Asian actors' compliance with global sustainability standards through certification schemes. Critically, European actors were thereby acquitted of their own historical and future responsibilities, even though the latter had long deforested their own territories and contributed significantly more to climate change, played a pivotal role in establishing palm oil cultivation and trade, and constituted leading importers of soy in the twentieth century. To open up for more equitable and inclusive future sustainability imaginaries, we encourage historical research that studies, situates and unpacks diverse sustainability knowledges and narratives across the globe in a symmetrical manner.
可持续性知识政治:东南亚、欧洲与棕榈油可持续性研究的跨区域历史
到目前为止,可持续性历史领域还没有充分解决学术可持续性知识制造的棘手政治问题。因此,本文研究棕榈油可持续性的科学研究如何在定义可持续性问题和解决方案时,制定了东南亚和欧洲之间的后殖民政治差异。在定量数据库查询(2500多个来源)和仔细阅读之间进行迭代,我们发现来自两个地区的科学家的声音在棕榈油可持续性研究中得到了充分的代表,但呈现出不同类型的叙述。来自东南亚的研究主要着眼于该地区本身产生、经历和需要解决的问题。相比之下,由欧洲学者领导的各种研究解决了人类普遍的全球可持续性问题,特别是全球森林砍伐和气候变化。这项研究认为,东南亚的棕榈油种植者应对造成和解决这些问题负责,而欧洲参与者则有责任通过认证计划确保东南亚参与者遵守全球可持续性标准。至关重要的是,欧洲参与者因此被免除了自己的历史和未来责任,尽管后者长期以来一直在砍伐自己的领土,对气候变化的贡献更大,在建立棕榈油种植和贸易方面发挥了关键作用,并在20世纪成为大豆的主要进口国。为了创造更加公平和包容的未来可持续发展想象,我们鼓励历史研究,以对称的方式研究、定位和解读全球不同的可持续发展知识和叙事。
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来源期刊
Global Environment
Global Environment ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
25.00%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: The half-yearly journal Global Environment: A Journal of History and Natural and Social Sciences acts as a forum and echo chamber for ongoing studies on the environment and world history, with special focus on modern and contemporary topics. Our intent is to gather and stimulate scholarship that, despite a diversity of approaches and themes, shares an environmental perspective on world history in its various facets, including economic development, social relations, production government, and international relations. One of the journal’s main commitments is to bring together different areas of expertise in both the natural and the social sciences to facilitate a common language and a common perspective in the study of history. This commitment is fulfilled by way of peer-reviewed research articles and also by interviews and other special features. Global Environment strives to transcend the western-centric and ‘developist’ bias that has dominated international environmental historiography so far and to favour the emergence of spatially and culturally diversified points of view. It seeks to replace the notion of ‘hierarchy’ with those of ‘relationship’ and ‘exchange’ – between continents, states, regions, cities, central zones and peripheral areas – in studying the construction or destruction of environments and ecosystems.
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