Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective

The concept of Ecological Solidarity is a key feature of the laws reforming National Park policy (2006) and biodiversity conservation policy in France (2016). The objectives of this presentation are (i) to show how ecological solidarity could be the core concept of a new social-ecological stewardship; (ii) to present a typology of the environmental stewardship approaches and to help positioning this social-ecological stewardship in an already rich conceptual landscape. First, we highlight how ecological solidarity provides a focus on the interdependencies among humans and non-human components of the SES. In doing so we identify ecological solidarity within a framework that distinguishes ecological, social-ecological and social-political interdependencies. In making such interdependencies apparent to humans who are not aware of their existence, the concept of ecological solidarity promotes collective action and reinforces the adaptive capacity of the SES and builds or makes stronger its resilience to changes. By focusing on the awareness, knowledge and acknowledgement of interdependencies between actors and between humans and non-humans, we present and discuss how an extension of a care approach from humans to non-humans and their interactions may lead the way for a grounded stewardship approach. In a second part we focus on the development and meaning of the stewardship concept in the current environmental science, ecology and biodiversity conservation literature. We present an adaptation of a political science framework and the 4 main types of stewardship we identified: reformist, adaptive, sustainability and transformative stewardship. The key distinctions between stewardship types are (i) the role of science, (ii) the exploration and integration of the plurality of values, and (iii) the capacity to modify values, rules and decision-making system. We then discuss on the consequences of these results, the place of social-ecological stewardship and present future directions for both research and integrated conservation and development policy. (Texte integral)

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Main Authors: Mathevet, Raphaël, Bousquet, François, Raymond, Christopher M.
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: s.n.
Subjects:P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières, E50 - Sociologie rurale, 000 - Autres thèmes,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585707/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585707/1/ID585707.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5857072018-09-20T16:13:06Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585707/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585707/ Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective. Mathevet Raphaël, Bousquet François, Raymond Christopher M.. 2017. In : Resilience 2017. Stockholm Resilience Centre, Resilience Alliance. Stockholm : s.n., Résumé, 10. Resilience 2017 : Resilience frontiers for global sustainability, Stockholm, Suède, 20 Août 2017/23 Août 2017.http://media.resilience2017.org/2017/08/Resilience-2017_Final-pdf-program.pdf <http://media.resilience2017.org/2017/08/Resilience-2017_Final-pdf-program.pdf> Researchers Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective Mathevet, Raphaël Bousquet, François Raymond, Christopher M. eng 2017 s.n. Resilience 2017 P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières E50 - Sociologie rurale 000 - Autres thèmes The concept of Ecological Solidarity is a key feature of the laws reforming National Park policy (2006) and biodiversity conservation policy in France (2016). The objectives of this presentation are (i) to show how ecological solidarity could be the core concept of a new social-ecological stewardship; (ii) to present a typology of the environmental stewardship approaches and to help positioning this social-ecological stewardship in an already rich conceptual landscape. First, we highlight how ecological solidarity provides a focus on the interdependencies among humans and non-human components of the SES. In doing so we identify ecological solidarity within a framework that distinguishes ecological, social-ecological and social-political interdependencies. In making such interdependencies apparent to humans who are not aware of their existence, the concept of ecological solidarity promotes collective action and reinforces the adaptive capacity of the SES and builds or makes stronger its resilience to changes. By focusing on the awareness, knowledge and acknowledgement of interdependencies between actors and between humans and non-humans, we present and discuss how an extension of a care approach from humans to non-humans and their interactions may lead the way for a grounded stewardship approach. In a second part we focus on the development and meaning of the stewardship concept in the current environmental science, ecology and biodiversity conservation literature. We present an adaptation of a political science framework and the 4 main types of stewardship we identified: reformist, adaptive, sustainability and transformative stewardship. The key distinctions between stewardship types are (i) the role of science, (ii) the exploration and integration of the plurality of values, and (iii) the capacity to modify values, rules and decision-making system. We then discuss on the consequences of these results, the place of social-ecological stewardship and present future directions for both research and integrated conservation and development policy. (Texte integral) conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585707/1/ID585707.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html http://media.resilience2017.org/2017/08/Resilience-2017_Final-pdf-program.pdf info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/purl/http://media.resilience2017.org/2017/08/Resilience-2017_Final-pdf-program.pdf
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country Francia
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libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
topic P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières
E50 - Sociologie rurale
000 - Autres thèmes
P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières
E50 - Sociologie rurale
000 - Autres thèmes
spellingShingle P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières
E50 - Sociologie rurale
000 - Autres thèmes
P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières
E50 - Sociologie rurale
000 - Autres thèmes
Mathevet, Raphaël
Bousquet, François
Raymond, Christopher M.
Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective
description The concept of Ecological Solidarity is a key feature of the laws reforming National Park policy (2006) and biodiversity conservation policy in France (2016). The objectives of this presentation are (i) to show how ecological solidarity could be the core concept of a new social-ecological stewardship; (ii) to present a typology of the environmental stewardship approaches and to help positioning this social-ecological stewardship in an already rich conceptual landscape. First, we highlight how ecological solidarity provides a focus on the interdependencies among humans and non-human components of the SES. In doing so we identify ecological solidarity within a framework that distinguishes ecological, social-ecological and social-political interdependencies. In making such interdependencies apparent to humans who are not aware of their existence, the concept of ecological solidarity promotes collective action and reinforces the adaptive capacity of the SES and builds or makes stronger its resilience to changes. By focusing on the awareness, knowledge and acknowledgement of interdependencies between actors and between humans and non-humans, we present and discuss how an extension of a care approach from humans to non-humans and their interactions may lead the way for a grounded stewardship approach. In a second part we focus on the development and meaning of the stewardship concept in the current environmental science, ecology and biodiversity conservation literature. We present an adaptation of a political science framework and the 4 main types of stewardship we identified: reformist, adaptive, sustainability and transformative stewardship. The key distinctions between stewardship types are (i) the role of science, (ii) the exploration and integration of the plurality of values, and (iii) the capacity to modify values, rules and decision-making system. We then discuss on the consequences of these results, the place of social-ecological stewardship and present future directions for both research and integrated conservation and development policy. (Texte integral)
format conference_item
topic_facet P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières
E50 - Sociologie rurale
000 - Autres thèmes
author Mathevet, Raphaël
Bousquet, François
Raymond, Christopher M.
author_facet Mathevet, Raphaël
Bousquet, François
Raymond, Christopher M.
author_sort Mathevet, Raphaël
title Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective
title_short Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective
title_full Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective
title_fullStr Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective
title_full_unstemmed Framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective
title_sort framing biosphere stewardship: an ecological solidarity perspective
publisher s.n.
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585707/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585707/1/ID585707.pdf
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