OCAD University Open Research Repository

Braiding Knowledge Systems as Environmental Peacebuilding: A four-dimensional analysis for co-applying Indigenous and non-Indigenous worldviews

Vojno, Natalija (2022) Braiding Knowledge Systems as Environmental Peacebuilding: A four-dimensional analysis for co-applying Indigenous and non-Indigenous worldviews. In: Proceedings of Relating Systems Thinking and Design, RSD11, 3-16 Oct 2022, Brighton, United Kingdom.

[img]
Preview
Text
Vojno_Braiding_Paper_2022.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (450kB) | Preview
[img]
Preview
Image (Sketchnote by Patricia Kambitch)
Vojno_Sketchnote_Image_2022.jpg - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (723kB) | Preview
Official URL: https://rsdsymposium.org/

Abstract

Our Future First

Environmental peacebuilding has evolved since Conca and Dabelko’s seminal work on peacemaking to now include preventative interventions as well as those that occur post-conflict. In recent years, both practitioners and academics have identified the need to recognise the leadership of women, Indigenous Peoples, youth, and local peacebuilding actors. However, the process of integrating worldviews in the sustainability sciences risks instrumentalising belief systems in a way that perpetuates underlying power and political asymmetries.

Critical water management literature calls for an ontological shift in how epistemologies relate to one another (Ermine et al., 2007; Stefanelli et al., 2017; Taylor, Longboat, and Grafton, 2019; Reid et al., 2021). Ontologies, or worldviews, can validate or invalidate ways of knowing and thereby open or constrain what are deemed to be viable policy responses within water governance and environmental peacebuilding. In response, this paper introduces a non-hierarchical conceptual model for braiding non-Indigenous and Indigenous ways of knowing for the management of the Great Lakes and, in turn, applies an ontological and phenomenological approach to environmental peacebuilding.

Item Type: Conference/Workshop Item (Paper)
Uncontrolled Keywords: environmental peacebuilding, water governance, phenomenological peace, political ontologies, worldviews
Divisions: Faculty of Design
Date Deposited: 30 Apr 2024 14:00
Last Modified: 30 Apr 2024 14:00
URI: https://openresearch.ocadu.ca/id/eprint/4285

Actions (login required)

Edit View Edit View