115 research outputs found
Du sport perçu comme un phénomène de sous-culture délinquante. Les jeunes Inuit à la recherche d’un impossible compromis
À la fin des années quatre-vingt, parents et responsables politiques du Nunavut, territoire des Inuit du Nord du Québec, durent se saisir d’un problème grave. Malgré l’existence depuis quelque dix ans d’une commission scolaire spécifique, ils faisaient face à un échec massif. Les enfants allaient à l’école avec plus ou moins d’assiduité, mais un infime pourcentage arrivait à terminer le secondaire. De cette minorité de finissants n’émergeaient que les meilleurs, qui tentaient de s’inscrire au..
Working with Indigenous, local and scientific knowledge in assessments of nature and nature's linkages with people
Working with indigenous and local knowledge (ILK) is vital for inclusive assessments of nature and nature's linkages with people. Indigenous peoples' concepts about what constitutes sustainability, for example, differ markedly from dominant sustainability discourses. The Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystems Services (IPBES) is promoting dialogue across different knowledge systems globally. In 2017, member states of IPBES adopted an ILK Approach including: procedures for assessments of nature and nature's linkages with people; a participatory mechanism; and institutional arrangements for including indigenous peoples and local communities. We present this Approach and analyse how it supports ILK in IPBES assessments through: respecting rights; supporting care and mutuality; strengthening communities and their knowledge systems; and supporting knowledge exchange. Customary institutions that ensure the integrity of ILK, effective empowering dialogues, and shared governance are among critical capacities that enable inclusion of diverse conceptualizations of sustainability in assessments
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Biocultural approaches to pollinator conservation
Pollinators underpin sustainable livelihoods that link ecosystems, spiritual and cultural values, and customary governance systems with indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLC) across the world. Biocultural diversity is a short-hand term for this great variety of people-nature interlinkages that have developed over time in specific ecosystems. Biocultural approaches to conservation explicitly build on the conservation practices inherent in sustaining these livelihoods. We used the Conceptual Framework of the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services to analyse the biocultural approaches to pollinator conservation by indigenous peoples and local communities globally. The analysis identified biocultural approaches to pollinators across all six elements of the Conceptual Framework, with conservation-related practices occurring in sixty countries, in all continents except Antarctica. Practices of IPLC that are significant for biocultural approaches to pollinator conservation can be grouped into three categories: the practice of valuing diversity and fostering biocultural diversity; landscape management practices; and diversified farming systems. Particular IPLCs may use some or all of these practices. Policies that recognise customary tenure over traditional lands, strengthen Indigenous and Community Conserved Areas, promote heritage listing and support diversified farming within a food sovereignty approach, are among several identified that strengthen biocultural approaches to pollinator conservation, and thereby deliver mutual benefits for pollinators and people
The IPBES Conceptual Framework - connecting nature and people
The first public product of the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) is its Conceptual Framework. This conceptual and analytical tool, presented here in detail, will underpin all IPBES functions and provide structure and comparability to the syntheses that IPBES will produce at different spatial scales, on different themes, and in different regions. Salient innovative aspects of the IPBES Conceptual Framework are its transparent and participatory construction process and its explicit consideration of diverse scientific disciplines, stakeholders, and knowledge systems, including indigenous and local knowledge. Because the focus on co-construction of integrative knowledge is shared by an increasing number of initiatives worldwide, this framework should be useful beyond IPBES, for the wider research and knowledge-policy communities working on the links between nature and people, such as natural, social and engineering scientists, policy-makers at different levels, and decision-makers in different sectors of society
Histoire et épistémologie des savoirs locaux et autochtones
In this paper, we will attempt an anthropological history of the concept of “local knowledge”, from the first research dedicated to the botanical or zoological knowledge of “traditional” peoples carried out in the 50’s, to the outburst of interest on behalf of actors as disparate as the World Bank, conservation and development NGOs, governments, biodiversity managers, not to mention the main stakeholders, i.e. indigenous peoples and local specialised groups.Through the history of different networks that contributed to developing the concept of local knowledge, traditional or indigenous ecological knowledge, we will highlight precursors and replace them in their heuristic context. We will also consider more recent trends, since the inclusion of traditional knowledge in several international conventions, particularly the Convention on Biodiversity. We will finally examine the epistemological impact of the combination of local knowledge and scientific and lay knowledge
25. Savoirs locaux et co-production des connaissances
Le modèle triomphant du scientifique comme seul détenteur des savoirs s’est effondré en même temps que celui du développement imposé de l’extérieur sous la contrainte, qu’il soit soutenu par le pouvoir coercitif d’un État colonisateur, ou simplement induit par le libéralisme. Cependant, si la révision des modèles du développement s’est imposée sous le coup des échecs de projets « clés en main » mal adaptés aux conditions locales, il a fallu plus longtemps pour admettre l’existence d’un savoir..
La punkitude, ou un certain dandysme
La punkitude. ou un certain dandysmeL'auteure s'intéresse aux différences entre la culture punk et celle d'autres mouvements marginaux. Elle établit les analogies et oppositions entre la culture punk et celle du dandysme auquel Baudelaire adhérait. Cène comparaison permet de dégager les structures caractéristiques de la punkitude et de comprendre le type de contre-culture qu'elle représente.Punkultur : Dandyism revisitedThe author takes a look at the differences between Punk culture and those of other marginal movements. She establishes analogies and oppositions between Punk culture and that of the Dandyist movement with which Baudelaire was associated. This comparison permits the disclosure of characteristic structures of Punk culture and the understanding of the type of counter-culture it represents
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