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Traditional knowledge in the Colombian Amazon: tensions between indigenous territorial autonomy and environmental governance

De La Cruz Nassar, Pablo Emilio [autor] | Bello Baltazar, Eduardo, 1960- [autor] | Acosta Muñoz, Luis Eduardo [autor] | Estrada Lugo, Erin Ingrid Jane, 1959- [autora] | Arce Ibarra, Ana Minerva [autora] | García Jiménez, Luis Enrique [autor].
Tipo de material: Capítulo de libro
 impreso(a) 
 
  y electrónico  
  Capítulo de libro impreso(a) y electrónico Tipo de contenido: Texto Tipo de medio: Computadora Tipo de portador: Recurso en líneaTema(s): Conocimiento tradicional | Organizaciones indígena | Gobernanza ambiental | Política públicaTema(s) en inglés: Indigenous knowledge | Indians organizations | Environmental governance | Public policyDescriptor(es) geográficos: Colombia | Amazonia Nota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso Nota general: Para consultar el capítulo véase el libro con la clasificación EE 333.715098 S6, en SIBE-San Cristóbal En: Socio-environmental regimes and local visions: transdisciplinary experiences in Latin America / Minerva Arce Ibarra, Manuel Roberto Parra Vázquez, Eduardo Bello Baltazar, Luciana Gomes de Araujo, editors. Cham, Switzerland, German : Springer Nature Switzerland AG, 2020. páginas 27-47. --ISBN: 978-3-030-49767-5Número de sistema: 60522Resumen:
Inglés

The present study aims to analyze the role of traditional knowledge in territorial autonomy and environmental governance, as well as the level of interest of different indigenous and non-indigenous actors in the southern Colombian Amazon in applying traditional knowledge to public policy. Using the theoretical approaches of political ecology as well as a qualitative method, we describe a multidisciplinary project developed and implemented to incorporate knowledge systems of indigenous peoples of the Colombian Amazon into environmental policy. The results present an analysis of arguments by indigenous organizations, researchers, and government environmental agency administrators for and against using traditional knowledge to address the global ecological crisis. Through interviews and reports systematized by researchers and local collaborators within the project, we discuss conflicts that emerge when attempts are made to apply traditional knowledge in asymmetrical spaces of power. This includes responses by local residents to the global governance regime, which imposes policies regarding traditional knowledge in indigenous territories, and the possible repercussions of environmental policies on indigenous autonomy regimes in territories considered to be ancestral by indigenous peoples. We conclude that indigenous communities and organizations are more willing to apply traditional knowledge to public policy when the process is oriented toward strengthening their territorial and environmental autonomy than when external actors attempt to use this knowledge to promote global regulatory regimes that are beyond the control of local actors.

Recurso en línea: https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2621507
Lista(s) en las que aparece este ítem: Ana Minerva Arce Ibarra | Erín Ingrid Jane Estrada Lugo
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Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Colección Signatura Estado Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras
Capítulos de libro Biblioteca San Cristóbal

Texto en la configuración de la biblioteca San Cristóbal

Ediciones ECOSUR (EE)
ECOSUR EE 333.715098 S6 Disponible CFS01000060522

Para consultar el capítulo véase el libro con la clasificación EE 333.715098 S6, en SIBE-San Cristóbal

Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso

The present study aims to analyze the role of traditional knowledge in territorial autonomy and environmental governance, as well as the level of interest of different indigenous and non-indigenous actors in the southern Colombian Amazon in applying traditional knowledge to public policy. Using the theoretical approaches of political ecology as well as a qualitative method, we describe a multidisciplinary project developed and implemented to incorporate knowledge systems of indigenous peoples of the Colombian Amazon into environmental policy. The results present an analysis of arguments by indigenous organizations, researchers, and government environmental agency administrators for and against using traditional knowledge to address the global ecological crisis. Through interviews and reports systematized by researchers and local collaborators within the project, we discuss conflicts that emerge when attempts are made to apply traditional knowledge in asymmetrical spaces of power. This includes responses by local residents to the global governance regime, which imposes policies regarding traditional knowledge in indigenous territories, and the possible repercussions of environmental policies on indigenous autonomy regimes in territories considered to be ancestral by indigenous peoples. We conclude that indigenous communities and organizations are more willing to apply traditional knowledge to public policy when the process is oriented toward strengthening their territorial and environmental autonomy than when external actors attempt to use this knowledge to promote global regulatory regimes that are beyond the control of local actors. eng

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