Sustainability dialogues in Brazil: implications for boundary-spanning science and education

Non-technical summaryBrazil – one of the world's largest biocultural diversities – faces high rates of habitat loss, social inequality, and land conflicts impacting indigenous and local peoples. To challenge that, Brazilian sustainability science and education needs to be strengthened. We searc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global sustainability 2024-01, Vol.7, p.30, Article e30
Hauptverfasser: Scarano, Fabio R., Brink, Ebba, Carneiro, Beatriz L. R., Coutinho, Luciane, Fernandes, Clemir, Holz, Vitória L., Salgado, Moema, Aguiar, Ana C. P., Latawiec, Agnieszka E., Pardini, Renata, Sampaio, Michelle C., Aguiar, Anna C. F., Branco, Paulo D., Freire, Laísa, Padgurschi, Maíra C. G., Pires, Aliny P. F., Soares, Isadora M. M., Solórzano, Alexandro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Non-technical summaryBrazil – one of the world's largest biocultural diversities – faces high rates of habitat loss, social inequality, and land conflicts impacting indigenous and local peoples. To challenge that, Brazilian sustainability science and education needs to be strengthened. We searched for elements in ongoing bottom-up sustainability social movements that can help serve that purpose. We found values, contents, and attitudes that, if incorporated into Brazilian sustainability science and education, can assist its transformative potential by reflecting local voices and critically engaging with (often-hegemonic) northern concepts.Technical summaryIn Brazil, a strong sustainability science and education is required to confront ‘glocal’ issues such as zoonotic pandemics and climate change, which are worsened by rampant ecosystem loss and social vulnerability. However, a largely disciplinary university system has been slow to meet these urgent needs. To address if and how dialogical processes with non-academics can prompt integration between distinct types of knowledge, we analyze four bottom-up sustainability initiatives that promote dialogues between science, the arts, religion, youth, and indigenous and local knowledge, and reflect on lessons learnt with movement organizers, scientists, and educators – the authors of this paper. Although sustainability science produced in dialogue with other forms of knowledge is still emerging in Brazil, we find that bottom-up initiatives outside academia can inspire science and education to approach sustainability as wholeness – a state of balance to be fulfilled when reached individually, collectively, and cosmically. We discuss how to approach a transdisciplinary and reflexive attitude in Brazilian sustainability science and education, and highlight its unique contribution to frontier topics in global sustainability debates.Social media summarySocial movements’ values, contents, and attitudes can inspire transformative Brazilian sustainability science and education.
ISSN:2059-4798
2059-4798
DOI:10.1017/sus.2024.25