生态系统恢复中的社区:包容性价值观和地方精英叙事创新的作用

Huxuan Dai, Ziyun Zhu, Balzang Trachung, Drugkyab Golog, Mark Riley, Zhi Lü, Li Li
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在应对生态系统退化危机的过程中,生态系统恢复实践的重要性日益凸显。为了提高恢复活动的长期有效性,需要加强社区对恢复项目的参与。在一些社区,传统价值观和地方价值观驱动着对环境变化的适应,因此社区参与的恢复方法需要将恢复技术与地方价值体系相结合。在青藏高原的两个牧区,我们采用 Q 法探讨了牧民对草原退化和恢复的态度,并了解了社区参与草原恢复活动的不同程度。这项研究揭示了两个社区中态度不同的八种牧民类型,其中,通过创造草原恢复的价值包容性叙事来利用变革性恢复行动的 "积极参与者 "类型的社区参与恢复实践的程度较高。我们建议决策者认识到当地世界观和价值观在促进环境适应方面的重要性,以及当地人在发展符合当地文化背景的价值包容性叙事方面所发挥的不可替代的作用。多方利益相关者之间需要进行公开对话和充分沟通,以建立互信,积累社会资本,推动传统社区的变革行动。这些方法对于促进社区参与和更好地推动生态系统管理计划至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Communities in ecosystem restoration: The role of inclusive values and local elites' narrative innovations
Ecosystem restoration practices are gaining prominence in coping with the crisis of ecosystem degradation. To improve the long‐term effectiveness of restoration activities, community engagement in restoration projects needs to be strengthened. In communities where traditional and local values drive adaptation to environmental changes, a community‐engaged restoration approach requires the integration of restoration techniques and local value systems. In two pastoral communities on the Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau, we used the Q method to explore pastoralists' attitudes towards grassland degradation and restoration and to understand different levels of community engagement in grassland restoration activities. Through this study, we aim to promote an understanding of the value‐based approach of local communities to enable better community engagement for the long‐term effectiveness of ecosystem restoration projects and contribute to the achievement and synergy of global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The study revealed eight types of pastoralists with different attitudes in two communities, with the type of Active Agents leverages transformative restoration action through creating value‐inclusive narratives of grassland restoration in the community with a higher level of engagement in restoration practices. Alongside this, we explored the pastoralists' perspectives of biodiversity in restoration and the importance of local elites in facilitating multiple‐actor cooperation in restoration projects. We recommend that decision‐makers recognize the significance of local worldviews and values in facilitating environmental adaptations, as well as the irreplaceable role played by local people in developing value‐inclusive narratives that align with the local cultural context. Open dialogues and sufficient communication between multiple stakeholders are needed to build mutual trust and accumulate social capital for driving transformative actions in traditional communities. Such approaches are essential to foster community engagement and gain better momentum in ecosystem management initiatives. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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