Co-Creativity and Engaged Scholarship 2021
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-84248-2_16
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Supporting Institutional Transformations: Experimenting with Reflexive and Embodied Cross-Boundary Research

Abstract: The sustainable management of natural resources (SMNR) is concerned with socially and environmentally just decision-making processes around the access to, and the control over, natural resources. However, SMNR is imbued of multiple (and conflictual) intersecting knowledges, practice, expertise and value systems, as well as unequal power relations. This makes achieving meaningful and inclusive collaborative practices far from straightforward, and by no means easy to guarantee. This chapter discusses some eviden… Show more

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“…Such a gendered lens, conversations, and work is deeply valuable to address gendered tensions in constructing commonsoriented projects. In the work on sustainable management of natural resources, Giambartolomei et al (2023) offer insights on how professionals in the public sector can transform governance relations "through relational, integrative and caring forms of democratic governance" towards alternative ways of "doing and being together" through "'lived' and 'owned' institutions". Similarly, the work of Dengler and Lang (2022) on the commonization of care argues from a feminist degrowth imaginary for the creation of "transformative caring commons" in socioecological provisioning.…”
Section: Re-embodying Water As a Commonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such a gendered lens, conversations, and work is deeply valuable to address gendered tensions in constructing commonsoriented projects. In the work on sustainable management of natural resources, Giambartolomei et al (2023) offer insights on how professionals in the public sector can transform governance relations "through relational, integrative and caring forms of democratic governance" towards alternative ways of "doing and being together" through "'lived' and 'owned' institutions". Similarly, the work of Dengler and Lang (2022) on the commonization of care argues from a feminist degrowth imaginary for the creation of "transformative caring commons" in socioecological provisioning.…”
Section: Re-embodying Water As a Commonsmentioning
confidence: 99%