Towards inclusive environmental governance: a study of the expert-lay interplay in a brazilian social movement

Tesis doctoral de Ana Delgado Aleman

First and foremost this dissertation concerns itself with inclusive manners of environmental governance. In a broad sense, it addresses the science-politics interplay in environmental governance. It focuses upon two main issues: the expert-lay interplay and the inter-relation between activism and science. Particularly, the dissertation looks at how these relations take place within the mst (movimento sem terra/landless peoples movement), which is one of the largest social movements in latin america. During the last ten years, a fraction of this movement has (transformed itself towards taking a more environmentalist stance) started moving towards environmentalism. Such a change has come along with an increasing process of expertification of the movement and a renewed interest in the democratization of science. Within mst there is an important debate on how to include local and traditional knowledges in the production of scientific facts. to a large extent, the arguments and descriptions presented in this work are based upon an ethnographic research carried out by the author between january 2005 and september 2006. The arguments presented here build upon theoretical approaches of science and technology studies as well as environmental studies (mainly sociology and anthropology). The thesis tries to integrate empirical and descriptive work with theoretical and normative reflection. The ethnographic descriptions show how the environmentalist fraction of mst has adopted, reinterpreted, contested and mobilized scientific images and claims, adapting them to msts political agenda. Furthermore, the dissertation presents some conceptual suggestions in the pursuit of more inclusive environmental governance. the arguments are organized around four main issues: 1) the social perceptions of science, identity and collective action; 2) trust in science and experts; 3) the constitution and social distribution of expertise; 4) inclusive environmental governance. In general terms, the dissertation concludes that the expert-lay interplay should be understood as deeply embedded in particular contexts of power relations. Categories such as expert, science, ecology, lay, citizenship, ransparency or democracy, are given different meanings and uses by different actors, in accordance with particular contexts of action. Those categories are partly the result of power relations. But in part, they are also re-conceptualised and mobilized in new social struggles. They shape new realities of environmental governance in the global and local levels. Science and politics (in this case, science and environmental activism) are co-produced in complex and often unpredictable ways. In the pursuit of real inclusive environmental governance, empirical work on how this co-production takes place is needed.

 

Datos académicos de la tesis doctoral «Towards inclusive environmental governance: a study of the expert-lay interplay in a brazilian social movement«

  • Título de la tesis:  Towards inclusive environmental governance: a study of the expert-lay interplay in a brazilian social movement
  • Autor:  Ana Delgado Aleman
  • Universidad:  Autónoma de barcelona
  • Fecha de lectura de la tesis:  17/04/2009

 

Dirección y tribunal

  • Director de la tesis
    • Louis Lemkow Zetterling
  • Tribunal
    • Presidente del tribunal: mike Michael
    • ragnar Fjelland (vocal)
    • margareta Bertilson (vocal)
    • Manuel Arias maldonado (vocal)

 

Deja un comentario

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *

Scroll al inicio