Remaking the Sustainable Development Goals: relational Indigenous epistemologies

Author:

Waldmüller Johannes M1ORCID,Yap Mandy2ORCID,Watene Krushil3

Affiliation:

1. PhD Anthropology/Sociology of Development, IHEID, Visiting Professor Escuela Politécnica Nacional of Ecuador and University of Vienna , Vienna, Austria

2. Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, Australian National University , Canberra, Australia

3. Philosophy, Massey University , Aotearoa, New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract While the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were inclusive in their design, the reliance on official measurement infrastructures has upheld narrow definitions of both the terms of sustainability and development. Indigenous and non-Indigenous “governance beyond the state” approaches call these definitions into question. They highlight that disaggregated official data are unable to fully reflect alternative grounds and aspirations of living sustainably with the environment and non-human world. Relational Indigenous epistemologies and practices contribute to alternative epistemic infrastructures. In this paper, three examples from the Andean-Pacific region provide an alternative lens through which to reconceptualize and remake the SDG landscape. Together this suite of cases highlights the importance of bottom-up articulation processes, knowledge inclusion, and alternative epistemic harmonization for operationalizing the SDGs. In particular, we highlight the urgent need to renegotiate the relationship between Indigenous communities and the global measurement infrastructure in order to pursue and realize global sustainability goals.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science

Reference100 articles.

1. Assessing national progress and priorities for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): Experience from Australia;Allen;Sustainability Science,2020

2. Report on the implementation of the sustainable development goals;Australian Government,2018

3. Buen Vivir (Good Living): Glocal Genealogy of a Latin-American Utopia for the World;Beling;Latin American Perspectives,2020

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