Placing diverse knowledge systems at the core of transformative climate research

Author:

Orlove BenORCID,Sherpa Pasang,Dawson Neil,Adelekan Ibidun,Alangui Wilfredo,Carmona Rosario,Coen Deborah,Nelson Melissa K.,Reyes-García Victoria,Rubis Jennifer,Sanago Gideon,Wilson Andrew

Abstract

AbstractWe argue that solutions-based research must avoid treating climate change as a merely technical problem, recognizing instead that it is symptomatic of the history of European and North American colonialism. It must therefore be addressed by decolonizing the research process and transforming relations between scientific expertise and the knowledge systems of Indigenous Peoples and of local communities. Partnership across diverse knowledge systems can be a path to transformative change only if those systems are respected in their entirety, as indivisible cultural wholes of knowledge, practices, values, and worldviews. This argument grounds our specific recommendations for governance at the local, national, and international scales. As concrete mechanisms to guide collaboration across knowledge systems, we propose a set of instruments based on the principles of consent, intellectual and cultural autonomy, and justice. We recommend these instruments as tools to ensure that collaborations across knowledge systems embody just partnerships in support of a decolonial transformation of relations between human communities and between humanity and the more-than-human world.

Funder

European Research Council

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Geography, Planning and Development,General Medicine

Reference146 articles.

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