Resilience through knowledge co-production: indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change
Confronted with the complex environmental crises of the Anthropocene, scientists have moved towards an interdisciplinary approach to address challenges that are both social and ecological. Several arenas are now calling for co-production of new transdisciplinary knowledge by combining Indigenous kno...
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Weitere beteiligte Personen: | , , |
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Format: | E-Book |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge ; New York, NY
Cambridge University Press
2022
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Links: | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108974349 |
Zusammenfassung: | Confronted with the complex environmental crises of the Anthropocene, scientists have moved towards an interdisciplinary approach to address challenges that are both social and ecological. Several arenas are now calling for co-production of new transdisciplinary knowledge by combining Indigenous knowledge and science. This book revisits epistemological debates on the notion of co-production and assesses the relevant methods, principles and values that enable communities to co-produce. It explores the factors that determine how indigenous-scientific knowledge can be rooted in equity, mutual respect and shared benefits. Resilience through Knowledge Co-Production includes several collective papers co-authored by Indigenous experts and scientists, with case studies involving Indigenous communities from the Arctic, Pacific islands, the Amazon, the Sahel and high altitude areas. Offering guidance to indigenous peoples, scientists, decision-makers and NGOs, this book moves towards a decolonised co-production of knowledge that unites indigenous knowledge and science to address global environmental crises. |
Umfang: | 1 Online-Ressource (xviii, 294 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781108974349 |
Internformat
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520 | |a Confronted with the complex environmental crises of the Anthropocene, scientists have moved towards an interdisciplinary approach to address challenges that are both social and ecological. Several arenas are now calling for co-production of new transdisciplinary knowledge by combining Indigenous knowledge and science. This book revisits epistemological debates on the notion of co-production and assesses the relevant methods, principles and values that enable communities to co-produce. It explores the factors that determine how indigenous-scientific knowledge can be rooted in equity, mutual respect and shared benefits. Resilience through Knowledge Co-Production includes several collective papers co-authored by Indigenous experts and scientists, with case studies involving Indigenous communities from the Arctic, Pacific islands, the Amazon, the Sahel and high altitude areas. Offering guidance to indigenous peoples, scientists, decision-makers and NGOs, this book moves towards a decolonised co-production of knowledge that unites indigenous knowledge and science to address global environmental crises. | ||
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spelling | Resilience through knowledge co-production indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change edited by Marie Roué, Douglas Nakashima, Igor Krupnik Cambridge ; New York, NY Cambridge University Press 2022 1 Online-Ressource (xviii, 294 Seiten) txt c cr Confronted with the complex environmental crises of the Anthropocene, scientists have moved towards an interdisciplinary approach to address challenges that are both social and ecological. Several arenas are now calling for co-production of new transdisciplinary knowledge by combining Indigenous knowledge and science. This book revisits epistemological debates on the notion of co-production and assesses the relevant methods, principles and values that enable communities to co-produce. It explores the factors that determine how indigenous-scientific knowledge can be rooted in equity, mutual respect and shared benefits. Resilience through Knowledge Co-Production includes several collective papers co-authored by Indigenous experts and scientists, with case studies involving Indigenous communities from the Arctic, Pacific islands, the Amazon, the Sahel and high altitude areas. Offering guidance to indigenous peoples, scientists, decision-makers and NGOs, this book moves towards a decolonised co-production of knowledge that unites indigenous knowledge and science to address global environmental crises. Krupnik, Igor Nakashima, Douglas Roué, Marie Michèle 1949- Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe 9781108838306 |
spellingShingle | Resilience through knowledge co-production indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change |
title | Resilience through knowledge co-production indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change |
title_auth | Resilience through knowledge co-production indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change |
title_exact_search | Resilience through knowledge co-production indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change |
title_full | Resilience through knowledge co-production indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change edited by Marie Roué, Douglas Nakashima, Igor Krupnik |
title_fullStr | Resilience through knowledge co-production indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change edited by Marie Roué, Douglas Nakashima, Igor Krupnik |
title_full_unstemmed | Resilience through knowledge co-production indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change edited by Marie Roué, Douglas Nakashima, Igor Krupnik |
title_short | Resilience through knowledge co-production |
title_sort | resilience through knowledge co production indigenous knowledge science and global environmental change |
title_sub | indigenous knowledge, science and global environmental change |
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