扩大地方气候行动:向社区组织学习,制定中美洲后发展议程

Michael Bakal, Nathan Einbinder
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摘要

本文以土著社区的价值观、实践和世界观为出发点,探讨了重新构想国际发展政策的可能性和局限性。通过对危地马拉的人种学研究,我们将发展行业对经济增长作为福祉黄金标准的过度关注与玛雅-阿基团体的观点进行了对比,后者坚持认为增长和现代化不能以牺牲生态、粮食主权或与土地相连的土著生活方式为代价。我们认为,与我们合作的玛雅-阿契组织提供的理念和实践比主流发展模式更能适应气候危机的紧迫性。为了使国际发展议程与当地的气候行动保持一致,我们建议将发展重新理解为 "美好生活"(Buen Vivir)--一种原住民的美好生活哲学。为此,我们提出了三条行动路线:(1) 增加对土著主导的气候行动的资金投入;(2) 重新认识发展实践,使其与 "美好生活 "相一致;(3) 改革社会和经济政策。
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Scaling local climate action: learning from community organizations to build a post-development agenda for Central America
This article considers the possibilities and limits of reimagining international development policy by taking the values, practices, and worldviews of Indigenous communities as its starting point. Drawing on ethnographic research in Guatemala, we contrast the development industry’s overwhelming focus on economic growth as the gold standard of well-being with the perspective of Maya-Achí groups, who insist that growth and modernization must not come at the expense of the ecology, food sovereignty, or Indigenous ways of life connected to the land. We argue that the Maya-Achi organizations with whom we collaborate offer a philosophy and practice better attuned to the urgency of the climate crisis than that of the dominant model of development. To bring the international development agenda in line with local climate action, we propose reconceiving Development as Buen Vivir—an Indigenous philosophy of good living. To do so, we propose three lines of action: (1) Increasing Funding for Indigenous-led climate action; (2) Re-conceptualizing development practices to align with Buen Vivir, and (3) Transforming social and economic policies.
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