Incorporating local, and placed-based knowledge in resource management: An anthropological study of coral reef entanglements in Costa Rica
Sammanfattning
The purpose of this study is to better understand how different local actors in Arenas1 on the
Talamancan coast in Costa Rica can work together and contribute to forms of more
sustainable resource management. The study shows that local actors understand sustainable
development as the restoration of relationships to the coral reefs. It is shown that the issue of
coral reef restoration can be linked to a larger discourse of knowledge, in particular regarding
what kinds of knowledge projects are based on, and who receives credit from those projects.
However, the possibilities to influence and change current practices are experienced as
limited, and greater governmentality support is needed in sustainable resource management
and coral reef protection. Through participant observation and semi-structured interviews
with locally based organizations, the thesis shows that these organizations can act as a vehicle
to understand, capture and transmit local knowledge and practice in terms of resource
management, as well as for enhancing understandings of human-environmental relationships
connected to the specific socio-ecological patterns in Arenas. An anthropological approach is
being used, through the frameworks of human-environmental relations and governmentality,
arguing that local, and place-based knowledge is critical for resource management strategies.
Examinationsnivå
Student essay
Samlingar
Datum
2022-08-24Författare
Doverhag Utbult, Hanna
Nyckelord
Human-environmental relations
Governmentality
Place-based knowledge
Sustainability
TEK
Costa Rica
Språk
eng