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首页> 外文期刊>Ecology and Society: a journal of integrative science for resilience and sustainability >Linking well-being with cultural revitalization for greater cognitive justice in conservation: lessons from Venezuela in Canaima National Park
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Linking well-being with cultural revitalization for greater cognitive justice in conservation: lessons from Venezuela in Canaima National Park

机译:将福祉与文化振兴联系起来,以提高保护意识:从委内瑞拉在Canaima国家公园获得的经验教训

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摘要

Across the globe, conservation policies have often suppressed nonscientific forms of knowledge and ways of knowing nature, along with the social practices of the groups that are informed by such knowledge. Reversing this process of epistemic supremacy is crucial both for achieving greater cognitive justice in conservation areas and ensuring that conservation aims are achieved. Doing so, however, is not an easy task. In situations of cultural violence, hidden environmental knowledge is not easily made visible unless adequate conditions for it to emerge are created. I show that one way forward is by conservation engaging with the well-being agendas of indigenous people, in particular, with the construction of their life plans. This discussion is illustrated through a case study in Canaima National Park, Venezuela, where over the last 20 years, social-ecological research has been studying existing conflicts over the use of fire while supporting the development of Pemon (the indigenous peoples in this area) Life Plans. Assisting in the development of life plans through participatory historical reconstructions, territorial self-demarcation processes, and facilitation of community reflexivity about its social-ecological changes and desired future has been decisive for the Pemon, and has revealed fire management knowledge that challenges conventional explanations of landscape change that simplistically place the blame for such changes on the local use of fire. This local knowledge, combined with results from studies of Pemon fire regimes, fire behavior ecology, and paleoecological research, now informs a counter narrative of landscape change that is influencing a shift in environmental discourse and policy-making toward an intercultural fire management approach. By documenting how social-ecological research has engaged with the Pemon Life Plan processes, I show the important role that cultural revitalization plays in making hidden and silenced local environmental knowledge more visible, and hence, in achieving greater cognitive justice in conservation.
机译:在全球范围内,保护政策常常压制非科学形式的知识和认识自然的方式,以及那些以此类知识为基础的群体的社会实践。逆转这种认知至上的过程,对于在保护区实现更大的认知公正以及确保实现保护目标都至关重要。但是,这样做并非易事。在发生文化暴力的情况下,除非创造了足够的条件使隐藏的环境知识不易被发现。我表明,前进的途径之一是通过养护与土著人民的福祉议程联系起来,特别是与他们的生活计划的制定联系起来。委内瑞拉卡奈玛国家公园的案例研究说明了这一讨论,过去20年来,社会生态研究一直在研究使用火的现有冲突,同时支持Pemon(该地区的土著人民)的发展生活计划。通过参与性的历史重建,领土自我分界过程以及促进社区对其社会生态变化和期望的未来的反思,协助生活计划的制定对于Pemon来说具有决定性意义,并揭示了消防管理知识,这对Pemon的传统解释提出了挑战。景观变化简直是将这种变化归咎于当地使用火。这种本地知识,再加上对Pemon火灾状况,火灾行为生态学和古生态学研究的结果,现在提供了一种景观变化的反面叙述,这种变化正影响着环境话语和政策制定向跨文化火灾管理方法的转变。通过记录社会生态学研究如何与《 Pemon Life Plan》互动,我展示了文化振兴在使隐藏和沉默的当地环境知识变得更加重要,从而在保护方面实现更大的认知正义方面的重要作用。

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