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Ethics of Participation in Environmental Field Research: Inclusion, Collaboration, and Transformation [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 246 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 480 g
  • Sērija : Research and Teaching in Environmental Studies
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Jul-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032343753
  • ISBN-13: 9781032343754
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 246 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 480 g
  • Sērija : Research and Teaching in Environmental Studies
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Jul-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032343753
  • ISBN-13: 9781032343754
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

This book provokes important new discussions about ethical participation in environmental field research by bringing to the fore the fluid nature of both ethics and participation.

Local participation is increasingly seen as a central and ethical part of environmental research; as such, many environmental efforts are becoming increasingly participatory. Participation, as a string of literature has shown, has many political, economic, social, and epistemic consequences, and ethics is fluid, polyvalent, and contextual. “Right is right, wrong is wrong” is dangerous rhetoric that centres western experiences and forecloses the myriad realities and relations bundled within and forced upon marginalised experiences. Both participation and ethics – as concepts and praxis – cast decades-long shadows over field research (particularly in anthropology), yet much of these discussions are left at the threshold of interdisciplinary spaces, where participation, traditional and Indigenous knowledge, co-production are brought in to sanitise and legitimise environmental actions. Where are our lessons learned and what ought we to make of their absence? The first half of this volume offers ethnographic examples that allow us to begin to ask whether participation (in the capitalist machinery and colonial legacies of academic knowledge) is ever even ethical. The second half of the book is dedicated to anti-solutions: refusals to define problems and approaches in fixed, closed terms from which equations, calculations, and solutions can be derived.

This book will be of great interest to all students and researchers across natural and social sciences whose fieldwork includes engagement with local communities and stakeholders, as well as conservation policymakers and practitioners who consult and work with local communities.



This book provokes new discussions on the fluidity of ethics and participation in environmental field research. It will interest students and researchers across natural and social sciences, as well as conservation policymakers and practitioners who consult and work with local communities.

Recenzijas

"This is the community-based research methodology book that we need! Gibson and Sauma have curated a volume that confronts the common assumptions, environmental research practices, and scholarly production shaped by unequal power relations and colonizing projects. Readers are invited into conversations between scholars that represent a level of praxis not often seen in academic circles. The authors compel us to question the ways in which we engage local communities in our research our (un)ethics grounded in a moral superiority and the (mis)conception that science is neutral and objective. It is designed to spark reflection and critical discourse that has been overlooked for too long."

Kishi Animashaun Ducre, Associate Professor of African American Studies, College of Arts & Sciences, Syracuse University

"This volume makes the compelling case that making research inclusive and participatory is at best a starting point on the way to addressing the moral and political terrain we engage in doing environmental field research. Modeling and reflecting upon the possibilities of decelerating, staying with trouble, and remaining resolutely available to the formative force of being in relation with others, this collection powerfully returns fieldwork to us as a matter of concern. Gibson and Sauma eloquently attend to ethical ambivalence and political complexity in practicing the interdisciplinary, collaborative work of environmental and conservation studies. Their interlocutors in this endeavour offer moving, unfixed, generative, and situated reflections on complex cases and lifeworlds, opening new points of connection for significant ongoing conversations. The book will be a lifeline for scholars grappling with the complexities of generating and moving knowledge, data, and people within, among, and beyond scholarly realms."

Alexis Shotwell, Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Carleton University

"Lydia Gibson and Julia Sauma, along with their collaborators in environmental (anthropological) research, have produced a creative, provocative, and relentlessly demanding co-produced volume that must become essential reading for the field and fieldworkers. Rarely are junior scholars allowed to fully articulate such strong critiques of the academic disciplines they labor within or to engage with an array of interlocutors in workshopping critiques that will resonate with readers at multiple stages of an environmental career. The time is right for this fearless reclamation of ethics in the form of deceleration, embodiment, empathy, interiority, attention, strategic betrayal, and anti-solutionism, and for the revitalization of the qualitative social sciences in the face of morally and intellectually bankrupt disciplinary hierarchies. Readers who take on the challenge to read this volume in its entirety will be forced to reevaluate their own commitments and simultaneously reinvigorated in the ongoing struggle to liberate participation from its supremacist foundations."

Amelia Moore, Associate Professor of Marine Affairs, University of Rhode Island

"A refreshingly honest and deeply reflective conversation on the unexamined ethical challenges inherent in field-based participatory projects. The book invites both scholars and practitioners to slow down and grapple with the implications of our well-intentioned, oftentimes naļve, and potentially harmful approaches to participatory research. Engaging with theoretical gaps in the field of anthropology, reflecting on hard-won lessons from field research, and probing conversations with interdisciplinary scholars, the authors challenge us to hold space for deeper and more nuanced approaches to the ethics of collaboration, participation and the co-production of knowledge. Asking questions that refuse to go away, the authors provides important provocations for all scholar-practitioners about the ethics of knowledge co-production with Indigenous peoples and local communities."

Amity A. Doolittle, Senior Lecturer II and Research Scientist, Yale School of the Environment

PART I Anthropological perspectives on environmental fieldwork ethics 1
The disappearance of anthropology in participatory debates: The politics and
poetics of deceleration, motion, knowledge, and labour; 2 How and what we
observe: A brief introduction to theoretical perspectives in environmental
social sciences; PART II Ethnographic instances: Thick descriptions of the
ethical issues 3 Ethnographic instances: Ethnographic writing and the place
of colonial knowledge; 4 When all our friends have gone away: On intention,
abandonment, and attending to the assumptions of environmental fieldwork; 5
We dont trust you: On the interior lives of communities and collaborators in
environmental research; 6 Data sharing in environmental science: Making
unlikely violences visible; 7 Collaborations over wolf recovery: Conservation
in Maremma, central Italy; PART III Workshopping the problem: Interviews with
environmental anthropologists and interdisciplinary scholars 8 Textual
workshopping: The anti-product, unfixing, and rejection of best-practice in
participatory environmental research; 9 Who owns these orangutans? And
other feral questions: A conversation with Liana Chua; 10
Interdisciplinarity, betrayal, and the ethics and purpose of (environmental)
research: A conversation with Paige West; 11 Working within: On attention,
power, and play in environmental fieldwork A conversation with Vanessa
Agard-Jones; 12 Distance, conflict of interest, and sacrifice in
environmental fieldwork: An interview with Sahil Nijhawan; 13 We have so much
to work with: The potential and failure of partnerships in the living forest
A conversation with Manoel Profeta Melo dos Santos; 14 There is, in fact, a
procedure: Creating legacies in collaborative field research A conversation
with Briggy; 15 Concluding discussion: Ending with the anti-solution
Lydia Gibson is Assistant Professor at Georgetown University, USA.

Julia Sauma is a Lecturer in Anthropology at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK.