Bridging knowledge systems to enhance governance of environmental commons: A typology of settings

Authors

  • Kaitlyn Joanne Rathwell University of Waterloo, Canada
  • Derek Armitage University of Waterloo, Canada
  • Fikret Berkes University of Manitoba, Canada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18352/ijc.584

Keywords:

Arctic, Environmental governance, indigenous knowledge, knowledge systems, multi-level governance, traditional knowledge

Abstract

We offer a typology of settings to bridge scientific and indigenous knowledge systems and to enhance governance of the environmental commons in contexts of change.  We contribute to a need for further clarity on how to incorporate diverse knowledge systems and in ways that contribute to planning, management, monitoring and assessment from local to global levels. We ask, what settings are discussed in the resource and environmental governance literature to support efforts to bridge indigenous and scientific knowledge systems? The objectives are: 1) to offer a typology that organizes various settings to bridge knowledge systems; and 2) to elaborate on how these settings function independently and in concert, using examples from a diverse literature in addition to field research experience. Our focus is on indigenous and scientific knowledge, but the typology offers lessons to bridge diverse knowledge systems more generally, and in ways that are sensitive to a moral, political and process-based approach. The typology includes specific methods and processes, brokering strategies, governance and institutional contexts, and the arena of epistemology. We describe each setting in the typology, and provide examples to reflect on the function and potential outcomes of different settings. Insights from our synthesis can inform policy and participatory action. 

Author Biographies

Kaitlyn Joanne Rathwell, University of Waterloo, Canada

 

Kaitlyn Rathwell B.A. (Hons.), M.Sc.

PhD Candidate, Social-Ecological Sustainability
Department of Environment and Resource Studies
Faculty of Environment, University of Waterloo, Canada
Environmental Change and Governance Group
http://ecgg.uwaterloo.ca/

Kaitlyn Rathwell is an environmental change scholar and practicing performance artist.Reconciling her intellectual and artistic selves, Kaitlyn is now engaging in what she calls ‘Art + Science Alchemy’. Her doctoral research is pushing the boundaries of Arctic transdisciplinary environmental research to include the arts. Kaitlyn is passionate about advancing the artistic response to environmental change and wants to contribute to bringing aesthetics into how society navigates complex social-environmental changes.

Derek Armitage, University of Waterloo, Canada

My academic background is in geography, environmental studies and international development. Prior to academia, I worked as a consultant on a variety of projects for Environment Canada, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, the GEF (World Bank), ADB and IADB, and before that, as a CUSO volunteer in Tanzania. I am a Senior Fellow, Earth Systems Governance project, Adjunct Professor – Natural Resources Institute (University of Manitoba), and past Working Group Leader – Oceans Management Research Network (Canada). I also serve as an Editor for the journals Ecology and Society and Conservation Letters.

Fikret Berkes, University of Manitoba, Canada

Dr. Berkes is an applied ecologist by background and works at the interface of natural and social sciences. He joined the University of Manitoba in 1991 as the Director of NRI, a position he occupied until 1996. He has served as the President of the International Association for the Study of Common Property (1996-98) and as the leader of a number of research groups. He has devoted most of his professional life to investigating the relations between societies and their resources, and to examining the conditions under which the "tragedy of the commons" may be avoided. He works on theoretical and practical aspects of community-based management, co-management, and traditional knowledge. His publications include the books, Sacred Ecology (Routledge, 2008), Breaking Ice (U Calgary Press, 2005), Navigating Social-Ecological Systems (Cambridge U Press, 2003), and Managing Small-Scale Fisheries (IDRC, 2001). See his list of publications and downloadable PDFs elsewhere on this web site. Dr. Berkes holds a Tier I Canada Research Chair (2002) and the title of Distinguished Professor (2003). For more detail, click on Canada Research Chair at the NRI site.

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Published

2015-09-18

Issue

Section

Research articles