Ksenija Hanaček, Dalena Tran, Arielle Landau, Teresa Sanz, May Aye Thiri, Grettel Navas, Daniela Del Bene, Juan Liu, Mariana Walter, Aida Lopez, Brototi Roy, Eleonora Fanari, Joan Martinez-Alier
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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文分析了采掘业对人与自然关系的全球影响。为此,我们利用了《全球环境正义地图集》(Global Atlas of Environmental Justice)中的社会生态冲突数据。我们使用对数线性回归法分析了 1800 多个涉及抵制破坏自然、文化、宇宙观、世界观、祖先起源和圣地的案例,并与 1600 个未报告此类损失的案例进行了对比。在开采矿石、种植园产品和原油时,影响尤为明显。结果表明,受影响的群体包括原住民、农民、牧民和宗教团体。在冲突结果中,79%的拒绝赔偿案例表明人与自然的联系受到了影响。此外,在发生暗杀积极分子事件的案例中,68%的案例表明人与自然的联系受到了影响。保护人与自然的纽带是实现社会、经济和环境可持续发展的重要组成部分,也是反对殖民关系中的采掘主义、反对这种纽带和环境保护者的正义之举:在线版本包含补充材料,可查阅 10.1007/s11625-024-01526-1。
"We are protectors, not protestors": global impacts of extractivism on human-nature bonds.
This article analyzes the global impacts of extractivism on human-nature bonds. To do so, we rely on socio-ecological conflict data from the Global Atlas of Environmental Justice. Over 1800 cases involving resistance to the destruction of nature, cultures, cosmologies, worldviews, ancestral origins, and sacred places are analyzed using log-linear regression compared to 1600 cases that do not report such loss. The impact is especially visible when mineral ores, plantation products, and crude oil are extracted. The results indicate that affected groups are Indigenous peoples, farmers, peasants, pastoralists, and religious groups. In conflict outcomes, 79% of cases with refusal of compensation indicate impacts on human-nature bonds. Furthermore, in those cases where assassinations of activists occurred, 68% have observed impacts on human-nature bonds. Protecting human-nature bonds is a critical component for achieving social, economic, and environmental sustainability and justice against extractivism embedded in colonial relations playing against such bonds and environmental protectors.
Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11625-024-01526-1.
期刊介绍:
The journal Sustainability Science offers insights into interactions within and between nature and the rest of human society, and the complex mechanisms that sustain both. The journal promotes science based predictions and impact assessments of global change, and seeks ways to ensure that such knowledge can be understood by society and be used to strengthen the resilience of global natural systems (such as ecosystems, ocean and atmospheric systems, nutrient cycles), social systems (economies, governments, industry) and human systems at the individual level (lifestyles, health, security, and human values).