UPCOMING EVENT: The Future of Sustainability: The Bio-Cultural Diversity Imperative [22 March 2024]

Indigenous-led Research Advancing Solutions to Climate Change

22-23 March 2024

We are living in a time that many academics and scientists refer to as the Anthropocene. As a controversial buzzword, the term Anthropocene implies unfolding anthropogenic impacts on the planet at an unprecedented rate and scale causing the accelerated global warming, unstable climate, changes to ecosystems and biodiversity, and extinction of species. Across the world, extreme weather event is becoming the new normal. Fuelled by human activity and carbon pollution, climate change is contributing to extreme weather events.

Indigenous communities across the world are disproportionally affected by the direct consequences of climate change. They inhabit ecologically sensitive areas that are becoming increasingly vulnerable to climate impacts. Their vulnerability is compounded by their dependence upon, and close relationship with the environment and its resources. Climate change exacerbates the difficulties and challenges already faced by indigenous communities, including political and economic marginalisation, loss of land and resources, human rights violations, discrimination and unemployment.

In the past, indigenous communities were often viewed as victims of the effects of climate change. However, indigenous communities are inextricably linked with their lands and possess a unique collective knowledge of their environments. With their traditional knowledge, indigenous communities have a key role to play in combating climate change, cutting across both climate mitigation and adaptation efforts. Therefore, indigenous peoples must be viewed as powerful change agents in contributing to effective climate action and sustainable development.

Indigenous communities represent a wealth of traditional practices, adaptive strategies, and a profound understanding of their ecosystems. Thus, placing indigenous knowledge at the centre of climate policy making is a strategic imperative. On one hand, it is a matter of urgency to increase the understanding and addressing the unique climate challenges faced by indigenous communities. On the other hand, enhancing the role played by indigenous groups in driving climate policy and action is equally critical. Indigenous led research and knowledge co-production provide opportunities for social learning and intersectional approaches to improve policies and plans.

To tackle complex development and climate challenges, there is a pressing need to improve understanding and share knowledge on science policies and best practices to address social inequality, poverty, and vulnerabilities, assess and identify technology needs and facilitating technology transfer for adaptation and mitigation, and integrate climate change into national and sectoral policies and development plans.

New forms of knowledge production are necessary to respond to the complexity of social, environmental, and economic concerns for sustainable development. Knowledges that are context-driven and problem-focused require the engagement of diverse social groups and multiple disciplines. Ecological, social and economic challenges have led to a growing recognition that transformative approaches are required that will require new ways of knowing, valuing and acting in the world.  In this context, the knowledge, values and actions of indigenous peoples and others who aspire through local practices for sustainability and social and ecological justice have a key role to play in this transformation.

Crucial to transformation is a clear vision for the future to be attained, yet grassroots-up deliberations on the future is less common. While the future is yet to exist, visions and expectations towards the future are conditioned by the past and impact on the possibilities of the present. The ‘Summit of the Future’ will take place at the United Nations in New York City on September 22-23, 2024.  It aspires to deliver a ‘Pact for the Future’ outcome document, intended to guide “a world – and an international system – that is better prepared to manage the challenges we face now and in the future, for the sake of all humanity and for future generations.”

International workshop on Indigenous led research advancing solutions to climate change

The 22-23 March 2024 event, co-hosted by the University of Michigan and Chulalongkorn University, will bring together multi-disciplinary scholars and special guests from Bangladesh, China, Nepal, the Philippines, USA and Thailand to share and discuss bio-cultural diversity, ecological crisis, environmental justice, and sustainability futures. With an aim to strengthen the science-policy interface in driving the role of indigenous communities in climate change, the event will enhance academic networks and serve as a co-learning platform for indigenous led research.

On the 22nd of March 2024, discussion panels on ‘No Sustainable Development without Environmental Justice: The Indigenous People and Local Communities Platform’ and ‘Indigenous-led Research and Policy Engagement for Human and Planetary Futures’ will be held at the Social Innovation Hub from 8.30am to 12pm.

On the 23rd of March 2024, a workshop will undertake a ‘Futures Lab’ process to collectively explore alternative futures, and to connect the local to the global and the international systems that structure it. Participants include experienced and academics and civic society leaders working at the global, regional and local level, as well as graduate students. The workshop will suggest actions that may inform an agenda towards the ‘Summit of the Future.’

Here is the agenda;

UPCOMING EVENT: "Demarcating public and private in land and environmental governance in the Mekong Region" [Kyoto, 19 April 2019]

Seminar by:

Emeritus Professor Philip Hirsch, School of Geosciences, University of Sydney and CSEAS Visiting Research Scholar

Dr. Carl Middleton, Center for Social Development Studies, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

Moderator: Dr. Xiaobo Hua, CSEAS, Kyoto University

12:00 - 13:00, Friday 19th April 2019

Tonan-tei (Room no. 201), 2nd floor of Inamori Foundation Memorial building, Center for Southeast Asia Studies (CSEAS), Kyoto University

Abstract:

In this presentation we take a critical look at the context-determined demarcation between the public and private spheres in the realm of land, natural resources and environmental governance in the Mekong Region. We explore the generation of plural meanings of “public” and “private” through development projects and policies, and the implications that such meanings hold for: the actor configurations and power relations that shape how collective and individual interests are defined; how claims to ownership of resources are formulated and legitimized; the spaces within which projects can be debated, contested and governed; and ultimately how benefits, costs and risks are distributed across society. Hydropower dams and large scale land concessions set the context in which we examine these issues.