凯塔泻湖:发掘被压抑的遗产实践,促进可持续湿地管理

Jonathan Bill Doe
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摘要

目前将遗产实践纳入后殖民民族国家湿地可持续管理的努力,假设这些实践一直以现在的形式存在。殖民秩序有意或无意地压制了许多当地的传统习俗。后殖民当局对西方科学的采用一如既往地延续了这种压制,尽管是以一种更为自由的形式。在《拉姆萨尔公约》中,自然科学家被赋予了保护湿地的角色,“以一种与维护生态系统自然属性相容的方式造福人类”。这就是著名的“明智使用原则”。本文重点介绍了Keta湿地的历史,并提出将关键知识持有人整合到管理计划中,以便在后殖民国家明智地利用湿地。殖民和后殖民政权使知识持有者隐形。现代想象——西方法律制度、西方科学和基督教——凌驾于当地传统习俗之上。因此,需要历史和遗产方面的专业知识来发现当地的可持续知识,以便将其纳入拉姆萨尔湿地的管理计划,从而在后殖民国家明智地利用湿地。
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Keta Lagoon: Uncovering Suppressed Heritage Practices for Sustainable Wetland Management
Current efforts to integrate heritage practices in the sustainable management of wetlands in postcolonial nation-states assume that these practices have always existed in the forms they are now. The colonial order, whether deliberately or otherwise, suppressed many local traditional practices. The postcolonial authority’s adoption of Western science invariably continued the suppression, albeit in a more liberal form. In the Ramsar Convention, natural scientists were assigned the role of conserving wetlands ‘‘for the benefit of humankind in a way compatible with the maintenance of natural properties of the ecosystem.’’ This became known as the wise use principle. This article highlights the history of the Keta wetlands and proposes an integration of key knowledge holders into management plans for a wise use of wetlands in postcolonial states. The colonial and postcolonial regimes made the knowledge holders invisible. Modern imaginaries – Western legal institutions, Western science and Christianity – were privileged over local heritage practices. It therefore requires historical and heritage expertise to uncover local sustainable knowledge for integration into the Ramsar management plan, hence a wise use of wetlands in postcolonial states.
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