通过人与自然联系(HNC)框架和有意义的农村工作,了解加拿大育空地区小型矿工的动机

IF 3.6 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
C.L. Johnson , K.R Moore , D Johnson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在加拿大育空地区,一群矿工作为小规模采矿的驱动力,探索了他们所经历的人与自然的联系。通过对20个砂矿的访问和对矿工、政府和供应商的32次半结构化访谈,研究发现,与自然的联系——而不是利润——是主要动机。使用HNC框架,数据显示矿工认为他们的生计是与他们对土地和自然环境的参与有关的有意义的农村工作。这些联系超越了物质需求,涵盖了经验、认知、情感和哲学领域。育空矿工有能力做出本地化决策,并参与整个矿山生命周期,这凸显了自主和接近自然的重要性。当地球材料被纳入自然的定义中时,采矿作为一种生态系统服务的概念就出现了。本研究挑战了将人类与自然和地球物质需求分开的二元范式,并有助于在采矿业中嵌入强大的可持续性的更广泛努力-一种将自然视为所有其他形式资本不可替代的基础的方法。报告还指出,在生态系统承受过度压力、远程决策或生计不安全破坏可持续性的情况下,高收入国家的脆弱性。育空地区为探索其他采矿模式提供了一个案例研究,例如强调负责任的做法和地方授权的慢速采矿。这些见解有助于人类与自然的辩论,并指出基于强有力的可持续性原则的更可持续的、基于地点的采矿框架。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding the motivations of small-scale miners in Yukon, Canada through a human-nature connection (HNC) framework and meaningful rural work
Human–nature connections (HNCs) experienced by a community of miners are explored as drivers of small-scale mining in Yukon, Canada. Through 20 placer mine visits and 32 semi-structured interviews with miners, government, and suppliers, the study finds that a connection to nature—not profit—is the primary motivation. Using a HNC framework, the data reveal that miners perceive their livelihoods as meaningful rural work tied to their engagement with the land and natural environment. These connections go beyond material needs, encompassing experiential, cognitive, emotional, and philosophical realms. Yukon miners' ability to make localized decisions and participate in the full mine life cycle highlights the importance of autonomy and proximity to nature. The concept of mining as an ecosystem service emerges when Earth materials are included within the definition of nature. This study challenges dualistic paradigms that separate humans from nature and Earth material needs, and contributes to broader efforts to embed strong sustainability in the mining sector—an approach that recognizes nature as the non-substitutable foundation of all other forms of capital. It also identifies the fragility of HNCs in contexts where excessive stress on ecosystems, remote decision-making, or livelihood insecurity undermines sustainability. Yukon provides a case study for exploring alternative mining models, such as slow mining, which emphasizes responsible practices and local empowerment. These insights contribute to human–nature debates and point toward more sustainable, place-based mining frameworks grounded in strong sustainability principles.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
19.40%
发文量
135
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