ausblenden:
Sprache(n):
eng - English
Datum:
2021-11-302022-03-252022-04-282022
Publikationsstatus:
Erschienen
Seiten:
294
Ort, Verlag, Ausgabe:
Cologne : University of Duisburg-Essen
Inhaltsverzeichnis:
1 Introduction: Knowledge, governance and diversity
1.1 Epistemic diversity as a research problem
1.2 The diversity gap: reviewing the literature
1.2.1 Science matters
1.2.2 Science, expertise and contestation
1.2.3 Dismantling the “great divide”
1.3 Toward the study of epistemic diversity in global governance
1.4 Ordering epistemic diversity: boundary work and categorization struggles
1.5 Reconfiguring knowledge-policy relations through heterarchies
1.6 Trajectories of change and polycentric sites of governance
1.7 A word on terminology
2 Research design, methods and data
2.1 Research design
2.2 Multi-site process tracing
2.3 Case selection
2.4 Data collection and analysis
2.4.1 Analyzing documents
2.4.2 Analyzing interviews
2.4.3 Analyzing observations
3 The coming of age of epistemic diversity
3.1 The “ethno” and the science
3.2 Oscillations between visibility and invisibility
3.2.1 Postwar precursors: on “backward people” and the facts of nature
3.2.2 The Stockholm conference or the conspicuous absence of indigenous knowledge
3.3 Global recognition and the advent of the knowledge holders
3.3.1 Paving the way for Rio: sustainable development encounters traditional knowledge
3.3.2 The Earth Summit and the global recognition of epistemic diversity
3.4 Ordering epistemic diversity
4 Diversifying global climate science and policy
4.1 Climate exceptionalism
4.2 The IPCC: diversifying global climate science
4.2.1 An overview of diverse knowledges in IPCC assessment reports
4.2.2 Climate adaptation as purposeful adjustment
4.2.3 Re-thinking adaptation: from adaptive capacity to traditional knowledge
4.2.4 The rediscovery of community in adaptation research
4.2.5 Co-production or the “best available knowledge”
4.2.6 The knowers and the known
4.3 The UNFCCC: diversifying global climate policy
4.3.1 The UNFCCC as a forum for indigenous peoples (and local communities)
4.3.2 Adaptation and diverse ways of knowing
4.3.3 Mitigation and diverse ways of knowing
4.3.4 The Paris Agreement: back to Rio and beyond
4.4 Re-ordering epistemic diversity
5 Arctic knowledge
5.1 Diversifying Arctic science through Sami knowledge
5.1.1 The Sami voice: Saami Council and Sami Parliaments
5.1.2 Becoming Arctic peoples and knowledge holders
5.1.3 The Arctic Council and the invention of Arctic knowledge
5.1.4 Sami knowledge: adaptation, co-production and resistance
5.2 Arctic knowledge in the Swedish side of Sápmi
5.2.1 Sweden in the Arctic: re-encountering the Sami
5.2.2 The Swedish side of Sápmi
5.2.3 The adaptive knowledge of Sami reindeer herders
5.2.4 Co-producing adaptive knowledge
5.3 Reconfiguring Arctic knowledge
6 Amazon knowledge
6.1 The diversification of Amazon knowledge
6.1.1 Amazonia: biocultural diversity and epistemic diversity
6.1.2 COICA and Amazon knowledge
6.1.3 Amazon Indigenous REDD+
6.2 The genesis and development of “indigenous carbon”
6.2.1 A generative question
6.2.2 Indigenous carbon as a hard fact
6.2.3 Scientific indigenous knowledge
6.3 Downscaling indigenous carbon: REDD+ and RIA in Ecuador
6.3.1 Ecuador in Amazonia: petroleum, native forests and indigenous territories
6.3.2 REDD+ in Ecuador
6.3.3 RIA in Ecuador
6.3.4 Money for nothing
6.3.5 Life Plans
6.3.6 The defense of life
6.4 Reconfiguring Amazon knowledge
7 A global platform for indigenous and local knowledge
7.1 Imagining a global platform for indigenous knowledge
7.1.1 Indigenous peoples’ organizational templates
7.1.2 Bolivia, Mother Earth and the “diplomacy of the peoples”
7.1.3 A platform: translating through ambiguity
7.1.4 Setting the pace of the negotiations
7.2 Operationalizing the Platform
7.2.1 The Platform after Paris: an array of alternatives in disarray
7.2.2 Design by bricolage: the Facilitative Working Group
7.2.3 Lost in translation: the local communities affair
7.3 The LCIPP as a knowledge-policy interface
7.3.1 The onion
7.3.2 Knowledge holders
7.3.3 Capacity for engagement
7.3.4 Climate policies and actions
7.4 Global institutional change towards epistemic diversity
8 Conclusion
8.1 Ordering and re-ordering epistemic diversity
8.2 Undone or incipient hierarchies: reconfiguring knowledge-policy relations
8.3 Entangled trajectories
8.4 Theoretical and methodological contributions
8.5 Avenues for future research
9 References
Art der Begutachtung:
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Art des Abschluß:
Doktorarbeit