Values, Knowledge, and Rights Shaping Land Use in the Peruvian Amazon

IF 0.8 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Case Studies in the Environment Pub Date : 2021-01-13 DOI:10.1525/CSE.2020.1234945.1
Mariaelena Huambachano, Lauren Cooper
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

In the midst of climate change, population growth, and global food crisis scenarios, efforts to succeed in Sustainable Land Management (SLM) implementation are under enormous pressure. To contextualize Indigenous experiences on nature valuation in light of sustainable development efforts, we explored how the traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) of two Indigenous communities interacted with major land policies with sustainability implications through an ethnographic and community-based participatory research approach. Data collection tools included talking circles, storytelling, unstructured interviews, and participant observation with Indigenous community members of Shimaa and Diamante to understand how two major land management policies intersect in SLM, Indigenous values, TEK, and rights in the Peruvian Amazon. In complementation with secondary literature assessing the focal policies, the empirical data analysis, through a lens of TEK, provides a deeper examination of Indigenous peoples’ ways of knowing. Research findings show that TEK of Indigenous peoples can support values of nature and shape the design and implementation of SLM policies by incorporating Indigenous peoples’ holistic values of nature (e.g., relational and intrinsic values) and methods for sustainable and equitable land management, with improved outcomes for communities. However, the TEK of Indigenous peoples, values of nature, and rights can be at odds with the Eurocentric-oriented SLM in terms of values placed on nature, and results in a disconnection between international and national policy goals with realities at the local levels. This study concludes that to fully realize the objectives of SLM, it is imperative for decision makers to recognize the TEK of Indigenous peoples rooted in a holistic understanding of the multiple values attributed to nature, which resonates with the notion of a plural approach to valuing nature. Further, methods should include land management practices that are beneficial for such communities and not strictly for the production of goods for societal consumption, however long it may be sustained into the future. Such a management scheme would value ecologic stability, community resilience, and a wide range of human-nature values while still recognizing development needs.
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秘鲁亚马逊地区形成土地利用的价值观、知识和权利
在气候变化、人口增长和全球粮食危机的背景下,成功实施可持续土地管理(SLM)的努力面临巨大压力。为了在可持续发展的背景下分析土著在自然价值评估方面的经验,我们通过民族志和社区参与式研究方法,探讨了两个土著社区的传统生态知识如何与具有可持续性影响的主要土地政策相互作用。数据收集工具包括谈话圈、讲故事、非结构化访谈以及对Shimaa和Diamante土著社区成员的参与性观察,以了解两项主要土地管理政策在秘鲁亚马逊地区的土地资源管理、土著价值观、TEK和权利方面是如何交叉的。与评估重点政策的二手文献相辅相成,通过TEK的视角进行实证数据分析,对土著人民的认知方式进行了更深入的考察。研究结果表明,通过将土著人民的整体自然价值(如关系价值和内在价值)与可持续和公平的土地管理方法结合起来,土著人民的生态技术可以支持自然价值,并影响土地管理政策的设计和实施,从而改善社区的成果。然而,土著人民的价值观、自然价值观和权利在自然价值观方面可能与以欧洲为中心的SLM不一致,并导致国际和国家政策目标与地方层面的现实脱节。本研究的结论是,为了充分实现SLM的目标,决策者必须认识到土著人民的TEK根植于对归因于自然的多重价值的整体理解,这与重视自然的多元方法的概念产生共鸣。此外,方法应包括有利于这些社区的土地管理做法,而不是严格地生产供社会消费的商品,无论这种商品可以持续到未来多久。这样的管理方案将重视生态稳定性、社区恢复力和广泛的人类-自然价值,同时仍然认识到发展需要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
18
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