全部 标题 作者
关键词 摘要

OALib Journal期刊
ISSN: 2333-9721
费用:99美元

查看量下载量

相关文章

更多...

Setting the stage for new global knowledge: Science, Economics, and Indigenous knowledge in ′The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity′ at the Fourth World Conservation Congress

Keywords: global knowledge , indigenous knowledge , science , economics , expertise , ecosystem services , biodiversity , global environmental governance , The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity

Full-Text   Cite this paper   Add to My Lib

Abstract:

Global environmental knowledge underwrites the authority of international institutions charged with managing climate change, biodiversity loss and other looming environmental problems. While numerous studies show how global knowledge gains authority at a macro-scale, few examine the everyday practices that establish authority in concrete settings. Investigating such day-to-day practices is important because concrete institutional settings may offer opportunities for resisting, affirming, or transforming global environmental knowledge and the policies it supports. As part of an ′event ethnography′ conducted at the International Union for Conservation of Nature′s World Conservation Congress (WCC) in Barcelona in 2008, this paper looks in detail at one important site in a high-level international study on ′The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity′ (TEEB). The WCC was a site where the TEEB organisers convened three fields of knowledge-economics, ecological and biodiversity sciences, and indigenous knowledge-in an attempt to secure authority for the economic valuation of ecosystems and biodiversity. Through three vignettes, this paper investigates the differential engagement of the three knowledge communities; how these engagements reveal the processes by which global knowledge is constructed; and the political ramifications of those constructions.

Full-Text

Contact Us

[email protected]

QQ:3279437679

WhatsApp +8615387084133