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Seiferth, C., Tengö, M. & Andersson, E. (2024). Designing for collective action: a knowledge co-production process to address water governance challenges on the island of Öland, Sweden. Sustainability Science, 19(5), 1623-1640
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Designing for collective action: a knowledge co-production process to address water governance challenges on the island of Öland, Sweden
2024 (English)In: Sustainability Science, ISSN 1862-4065, E-ISSN 1862-4057, Vol. 19, no 5, p. 1623-1640Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Enabling diverse actors to address interlinked sustainability issues is important and challenging. This paper focuses on how to design a dialogue-based knowledge co-production process to nurture collective action. Using the conceptualization of systems, target, and operational knowledge as the guiding framework, we designed and combined different complementary activities to invite actors to look at a wicked problem through multiple lenses and reflect on their own positions, perspectives, knowledge, and values. With a carefully documented workshop series held with local actors on Öland, Sweden, as our empirical case study, we demonstrate how we moved from exploring the multifunctionality of landscapes and understanding actors’ different values, preferences, and priorities, to developing four strategies for effectively accelerating and expanding efforts to adapt to climate change. Our study reveals how the process of mobilizing, articulating, and connecting individually held systems, target, and operational knowledge nurtures collective action. It also leverages dialogue-based processes as cornerstones in addressing sustainability challenges in an inclusive and equitable way.

Keywords
Collective action, Knowledge co-production, Social-ecological systems, Transdisciplinary research, Water governance, Workshops
National Category
Enviromental Studies in Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-237909 (URN)10.1007/s11625-024-01531-4 (DOI)001282681300001 ()2-s2.0-85200385402 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2025-01-15 Created: 2025-01-15 Last updated: 2025-01-15Bibliographically approved
Barceló, M., Tengö, M., Simonetti, J. A. & Gelcich, S. (2024). Exploring links between local knowledge, values and livelihoods in land-sea interface: insights on emerging tradeoffs and change in Southern Chile. Ecosystems and People, 20(1), Article ID 2329562.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Exploring links between local knowledge, values and livelihoods in land-sea interface: insights on emerging tradeoffs and change in Southern Chile
2024 (English)In: Ecosystems and People, ISSN 2639-5908, E-ISSN 2639-5916, Vol. 20, no 1, article id 2329562Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Local knowledge and values of coastal communities offer insights into the intricate human-nature relationships in the land-sea interface. Considering a diversity of values unveils how people perceive nature, encompassing both tangible and intangible dimensions, and this understanding is part of how they navigate dynamic environmental challenges by embracing livelihood diversification spanning land-sea activities. Better understanding of these values, relationships and diversification strategies can improve social-ecological systems theory and practice. Here we assess links between local knowledge, values and livelihoods in order to identify emerging tradeoffs. Using semi-structured interviews with qualitative and quantitative methods, we conducted a total of 88 interviews in five communities in Southern Chile. Local knowledge and values were collected as free-listing on terrestrial and marine species. We probed relationships between livelihood diversification and values, classified as relational, intrinsic, and instrumental. Our findings showed that marine species were most associated with instrumental values, while terrestrial species had a balance between relational, intrinsic and instrumental values. We observed that as communities expand their livelihoods and live closer to the city, they showed lower knowledge and values, and in these cases instrumental values predominate. Certain diversification strategies could lead to time constraints, impacting the transmission of knowledge and resulting in less values. Deeper and long-term cooperation between different actors to recover and protect different values is necessary to couple local knowledge and values with livelihood diversification. Our research provides valuable insights for policymakers aiming to develop holistic strategies that include relational values and leverage diverse knowledge systems to address contemporary environmental challenges.

Keywords
Relational values, plural values, coastal communities, diversification of livelihoods, Chile, land-sea interface
National Category
Environmental Sciences Ecology Peace and Conflict Studies Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-228707 (URN)10.1080/26395916.2024.2329562 (DOI)001197075700001 ()2-s2.0-85189648153 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2024-04-26 Created: 2024-04-26 Last updated: 2025-02-20Bibliographically approved
Jonsson, A., Haider, L. J., Pereira, L., Fremier, A., Folke, C., Tengö, M. & Gordon, L. (2024). Nurturing gastronomic landscapes for biosphere stewardship. Global Food Security, 42, Article ID 100789.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Nurturing gastronomic landscapes for biosphere stewardship
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2024 (English)In: Global Food Security, ISSN 2211-9124, Vol. 42, article id 100789Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

As a result of years of increased rationalization and consolidation of food systems, the knowledge and skills of many actors in food value chains, especially those linked to smaller-scale traditional and artisanal production, processing, and cooking, have rapidly been eroded. Despite the resilience that such knowledge and skills can offer. In this paper, we use the lens of gastronomy to highlight how culinary craftsmanship and innovation hold potential to drive the development of biosphere stewardship that contributes to more biocultural, diverse, and resilient landscapes. We propose the concept of ‘gastronomic landscapes,’ i.e., land/seascapes that are governed, managed, or cared for to contribute specifically to culinary development while having substantive value for landscape resilience and food system sustainability. Through six cases representing different knowledge systems and landscapes across the world, the breadth of gastronomy and how it is linked to landscapes is highlighted. We develop a typology of characteristics that can be used to analyze gastronomic landscapes based on locality, diversity, and quality. In the paper, we conclude that thinking and acting in line with gastronomic landscapes can help build resilience and food sovereignty over time and offers a helpful conceptualization for further studies.

Keywords
Biosphere stewardship, Food sovereignty, Food systems, Gastronomy, Sustainability
National Category
Environmental Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-237864 (URN)10.1016/j.gfs.2024.100789 (DOI)2-s2.0-85202749218 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2025-01-15 Created: 2025-01-15 Last updated: 2025-01-15Bibliographically approved
Mahajan, S. L., Tanner, L., Ahmadia, G., Becker, H., DeMello, N., Fidler, R., . . . Glew, L. (2023). Accelerating evidence-informed decision-making in conservation implementing agencies through effective monitoring, evaluation, and learning. Biological Conservation, 286, Article ID 110304.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Accelerating evidence-informed decision-making in conservation implementing agencies through effective monitoring, evaluation, and learning
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2023 (English)In: Biological Conservation, ISSN 0006-3207, E-ISSN 1873-2917, Vol. 286, article id 110304Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Evidence-informed decision-making can help catalyze the development and implementation of effective conservation actions. Yet despite decades of research on evidence-informed conservation, its realization within conservation implementing agencies and organizations still faces challenges. First, conservation decisions are shaped by individual, organizational, and systemic factors that operate and interact across different temporal and spatial scales. Second, the different cultures and value systems within conservation implementing agencies fuels continued debate on what can and should count as evidence for decision-making, and ultimately shapes how evidence is used in practice. While the importance of evidence-informed conservation is increasingly recognized, we have witnessed few changes within conservation implementing agencies that could enable better engagement with diverse types of evidence and knowledge holders. Based on our experience supporting monitoring, evaluation and learning systems in conservation implementing agencies, we argue that to realize evidence-informed conservation we need a better understanding of the process and context of conservation decision-making within organizations, an alignment of institutional systems and processes that generate evidence relevant to information needs, and changes that help conservation organizations become learning organizations. These actions could help transform how conservation practitioners and organizations learn to enable more evidence-informed decision-making within the complex systems they work in.

Keywords
Conservation, Culture change, Decision-making, Evidence, Knowledge systems, Learning organizations, Monitoring, evaluation, and learning, Organizations
National Category
Other Biological Topics Peace and Conflict Studies Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-223002 (URN)10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110304 (DOI)001086913800001 ()2-s2.0-85172465416 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2023-10-26 Created: 2023-10-26 Last updated: 2025-02-20Bibliographically approved
Sonetti-González, T., Mancilla García, M., Tengö, M., Tourne, D. C. M., de Castro, F. & Futemma, C. R. T. (2023). Foregrounding Amazonian women through decolonial and process-relational perspectives for transdisciplinary transformation. Ecosystems and People, 19(1), Article ID 2260503.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Foregrounding Amazonian women through decolonial and process-relational perspectives for transdisciplinary transformation
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2023 (English)In: Ecosystems and People, ISSN 2639-5908, E-ISSN 2639-5916, Vol. 19, no 1, article id 2260503Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The vulnerability of the Amazon has widely increased with the COVID-19 global pandemic and with the dismantlement of environmental protection policies in Brazil during the Bolsonaro administration. By contrast, local initiatives focusing on sustainable production, conservation, enhancing local people’s quality of life, and supporting a more inclusive economy have emerged throughout the region and are building resilience in face of these disruptions. They represent seeds for transformation towards more sustainable trajectories from the ground up. In this context, women play a significant role, but their actions and voices are poorly understood, studied, or even considered. In this article, we use a novel approach to engage and highlight women’s experiences by connecting decolonial and process-relational perspectives. Decolonial and process-relational thinking are closely linked in many ways, including in that they embrace difference as a mode of experiencing social-ecological relations. One particular aspect of this link is the shared focus on liminal thinking or thinking from the borders, what we call ‘betweenness’. In our decolonial praxis, we highlight women’s perspectives on their particular and diverse ways of life in the Amazon as they confront diverse pressures. To this end, we collaborated with 39 women from Santarém and neighboring towns in western Pará through participant observation, semi-structured interviews and facilitated dialogues. We discuss their perspectives on regional transformation, particularly the expansion of large-scale agribusiness around rural communities, and their understanding and responses to these changes. We reflect on the mutual learning experience resulting from the transdisciplinary engagement between researchers and collaborators.

Keywords
Matthew Weaver, Decoloniality, process-relational, border thinking, betweenness, transformations, Brazilian Amazon
National Category
Gender Studies Other Geographic Studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-223878 (URN)10.1080/26395916.2023.2260503 (DOI)001085786200001 ()2-s2.0-85174619620 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2023-11-21 Created: 2023-11-21 Last updated: 2025-05-08Bibliographically approved
Londres, M., Salk, C., Andersson, K. P., Tengö, M., Brondizio, E. S., Lopes, G. R., . . . Tourne, D. C. M. (2023). Place-based solutions for global social-ecological dilemmas: An analysis of locally grounded, diversified, and cross-scalar initiatives in the Amazon. Global Environmental Change, 82, Article ID 102718.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Place-based solutions for global social-ecological dilemmas: An analysis of locally grounded, diversified, and cross-scalar initiatives in the Amazon
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2023 (English)In: Global Environmental Change, ISSN 0959-3780, E-ISSN 1872-9495, Vol. 82, article id 102718Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The Amazon has a diverse array of social and environmental initiatives that adopt forest-based land-use practices to promote rural development and support local livelihoods. However, they are often insufficiently recognized as transformative pathways to sustainability and the factors that explain their success remain understudied. To address this gap, this paper proposes that local initiatives that pursue three particular pathways are more likely to generate improvements in social-ecological outcomes: (1) maintaining close connections with local grassroots, (2) pursuing diversity in productive activities performed and partnership choices, and (3) developing cross-scale collaborations. To test these ideas we collected and analyzed observations of 157 initiatives in Brazil and Peru, applying a combination of quantitative and qualitative analyses. Our results show that initiatives maintaining groundedness in representing the interests and concerns of local actors while partnering with other organizations at multiple scales are more likely to develop joint solutions to social-ecological problems. Partnerships and support from external organizations may strengthen and enhance local capabilities, providing a platform for negotiating interests and finding common ground. Such diversified pathways demonstrate the power of local actors to transcend their own territories and have broader impacts in sustainability objectives. Our findings highlight the need to make governmental and non-governmental support (e.g., financial, technical, political) available according to local needs to enable local initiatives' own ways of addressing global environmental change.

Keywords
Place-based initiatives, Amazon basin, Stakeholder diversity, Rural livelihoods, Forest governance, Cross-scalar interactions, Brazil, Peru
National Category
Earth and Related Environmental Sciences Social and Economic Geography
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-221406 (URN)10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2023.102718 (DOI)001028782500001 ()2-s2.0-85163207590 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2023-09-20 Created: 2023-09-20 Last updated: 2025-01-31Bibliographically approved
Chambers, J. M., Wyborn, C., Klenk, N. L., Ryan, M., Serban, A., Bennett, N. J., . . . Rondeau, R. (2022). Co-productive agility and four collaborative pathways to sustainability transformations. Global Environmental Change, 72, Article ID 102422.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Co-productive agility and four collaborative pathways to sustainability transformations
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2022 (English)In: Global Environmental Change, ISSN 0959-3780, E-ISSN 1872-9495, Vol. 72, article id 102422Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Co-production, the collaborative weaving of research and practice by diverse societal actors, is argued to play an important role in sustainability transformations. Yet, there is still poor understanding of how to navigate the tensions that emerge in these processes. Through analyzing 32 initiatives worldwide that co-produced knowledge and action to foster sustainable social-ecological relations, we conceptualize 'co-productive agility' as an emergent feature vital for turning tensions into transformations. Co-productive agility refers to the willingness and ability of diverse actors to iteratively engage in reflexive dialogues to grow shared ideas and actions that would not have been possible from the outset. It relies on embedding knowledge production within processes of change to constantly recognize, reposition, and navigate tensions and opportunities. Co-productive agility opens up multiple pathways to transformation through: (1) elevating marginalized agendas in ways that maintain their integrity and broaden struggles for justice; (2) questioning dominant agendas by engaging with power in ways that challenge assumptions, (3) navigating conflicting agendas to actively transform interlinked paradigms, practices, and structures; (4) exploring diverse agendas to foster learning and mutual respect for a plurality of perspectives. We explore six process considerations that vary by these four pathways and provide a framework to enable agility in sustainability transformations. We argue that research and practice spend too much time closing down debate over different agendas for change - thereby avoiding, suppressing, or polarizing tensions, and call for more efforts to facilitate better interactions among different agendas.

Keywords
Co-production, Transformative processes, Social-ecological relations, Power relations
National Category
Other Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-201326 (URN)10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102422 (DOI)000738910700006 ()
Available from: 2022-01-27 Created: 2022-01-27 Last updated: 2022-02-25Bibliographically approved
Reyes-Garciá, V., Tofighi-Niaki, A., Austin, B. J., Benyei, P., Danielsen, F., Fernández-Llamazares, Á., . . . Tengö, M. (2022). Data Sovereignty in Community-Based Environmental Monitoring: Toward Equitable Environmental Data Governance. BioScience, 72(8), 714-717
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Data Sovereignty in Community-Based Environmental Monitoring: Toward Equitable Environmental Data Governance
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2022 (English)In: BioScience, ISSN 0006-3568, E-ISSN 1525-3244, Vol. 72, no 8, p. 714-717Article in journal (Refereed) Published
National Category
Computer and Information Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-212076 (URN)10.1093/biosci/biac048 (DOI)000812734300001 ()2-s2.0-85136168345 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2022-12-01 Created: 2022-12-01 Last updated: 2022-12-01Bibliographically approved
Biggs, R., Clements, H. S., Cumming, G. S., Cundill, G., de Vos, A., Hamann, M., . . . Reyers, B. (2022). Social-ecological change: insights from the Southern African Program on Ecosystem Change and Society. Ecosystems and People, 18(1), 447-468
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Social-ecological change: insights from the Southern African Program on Ecosystem Change and Society
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2022 (English)In: Ecosystems and People, ISSN 2639-5908, E-ISSN 2639-5916, Vol. 18, no 1, p. 447-468Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Social-ecological systems (SES) research has emerged as an important area of sustainability science, informing and supporting pressing issues of transformation towards more sustainable, just and equitable futures. To date, much SES research has been done in or from the Global North, where the challenges and contexts for supporting sustainability transformations are substantially different from the Global South. This paper synthesises emerging insights on SES dynamics that can inform actions and advance research to support sustainability transformations specifically in the southern African context. The paper draws on work linked to members of the Southern African Program on Ecosystem Change and Society (SAPECS), a leading SES research network in the region, synthesizing key insights with respect to the five core themes of SAPECS: (i) transdisciplinary and engaged research, (ii) ecosystem services and human well-being, (iii) governance institutions and management practices, (iv) spatial relationships and cross-scale connections, and (v) regime shifts, traps and transformations. For each theme, we focus on insights that are particularly novel, interesting or important in the southern African context, and reflect on key research gaps and emerging frontiers for SES research in the region going forward. Such place-based insights are important for understanding the variation in SES dynamics around the world, and are crucial for informing a context-sensitive global agenda to foster sustainability transformations at local to global scales.

Keywords
SAPECS, social-ecological systems, transdisciplinarity, ecosystem services, human well-being, transformations, Global South
National Category
Earth and Related Environmental Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-209181 (URN)10.1080/26395916.2022.2097478 (DOI)000840504900001 ()
Available from: 2022-09-20 Created: 2022-09-20 Last updated: 2025-02-07Bibliographically approved
Tengö, M. & Andersson, E. (2022). Solutions-oriented research for sustainability: Turning knowledge into action. Ambio, 51(1), 25-30
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Solutions-oriented research for sustainability: Turning knowledge into action
2022 (English)In: Ambio, ISSN 0044-7447, E-ISSN 1654-7209, Vol. 51, no 1, p. 25-30Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

In this perspective, we reflect upon the question: what processes may help transition scientific insights on sustainability issues into practice and thus contribute to tackling the complex, systemic sustainability problems of today? We use five forerunners in the field of providing and brokering knowledge for science informed real world solutions, all published in Ambio and highlighted in this Anniversary collection, as our starting point. We discuss how the authors present solutions, whom they tried to reach, and what was suggested—implicitly or explicitly—as the potential uptake processes for turning scientific knowledge into practice. With this as the starting point, we discuss how sustainability science, as a field vowed to action, has evolved in its views of actors, pathways for impacts, and the potential roles of research and researchers to promote sustainability transformations.

Keywords
Co-production of knowledge, Policy entrepreneurship, Solutions-oriented research, Sustainability science, Transdisciplinarity, Usable knowledge
National Category
Other Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-193208 (URN)10.1007/s13280-020-01492-9 (DOI)000628733600003 ()33715095 (PubMedID)
Note

This article belongs to Ambio's 50th Anniversary Collection. Theme: Solutions-oriented research

Available from: 2021-05-18 Created: 2021-05-18 Last updated: 2021-12-21Bibliographically approved
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ORCID iD: ORCID iD iconorcid.org/0000-0002-4776-3748

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