'We are happy to tell you the sisimol stories (small stories)': Reframing what counts as conservation work in the Arnavon Islands, Solomon Islands

被引:7
作者
Fidali, Kristina L. [1 ]
Larder, Nicolette [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ New England, Human Geog, Armidale, NSW 2350, Australia
关键词
conservation; diverse economies; diverse livelihoods; postcapitalist sustainability; Solomon Islands; COMMUNITY; GENDER; WOMEN; BIODIVERSITY; EMPOWERMENT; RESILIENCE; LESSONS;
D O I
10.1111/apv.12325
中图分类号
K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ;
摘要
Funders and governments alike increasingly understand the importance of women's inclusion in environmental conservation and natural resource management across the Pacific region. Despite this recognition, the weight of evidence suggests that entrenched gender inequalities continue to create barriers for women's engagement in conservation management and related projects like those for climate change adaptation. Against the dominant narrative that women are always marginal in environmental management in the Pacific, we draw on the small stories provided by women in communities around the Arnavon Islands in the Solomon Islands to show that in fact women are deeply engaged in conservation efforts and environmental care. Building on the concept of emplaced sustainability, we reframe what counts as the work of environmental conservation to include the mundane, small and everyday activities undertaken by women. Rather than marginal, the collective mundane and everyday work of women takes place alongside the 'important' or 'big' work of conservation in the region and we argue that both kinds of labouring matter for sustaining ecological livelihoods.
引用
收藏
页码:113 / 125
页数:13
相关论文
共 56 条
  • [41] Gender relations in the workplace: The experience of female managers in African harbours
    Primecz, Henriett
    Karjalainen, Helena
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CROSS CULTURAL MANAGEMENT, 2019, 19 (03) : 291 - 314
  • [42] Theorizing the meso level: the household as a crucible of pro-environmental behaviour
    Reid, Louise
    Sutton, Philip
    Hunter, Colin
    [J]. PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY, 2010, 34 (03) : 309 - 327
  • [43] The Characteristics of Locally Led Development in the Pacific
    Roche, Chris
    Cox, John
    Rokotuibau, Mereani
    Tawake, Peni
    Smith, Yeshe
    [J]. POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE, 2020, 8 (04): : 136 - 146
  • [44] Traditional peoples and climate change Introduction
    Salick, Jan
    Ross, Nanci
    [J]. GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2009, 19 (02): : 137 - 139
  • [45] Samuwai J., 2020, SMALL STATES TERRIT, V3, P283
  • [46] Church women's groups and the empowerment of women in Solomon Islands
    Scheyvens, R
    [J]. OCEANIA, 2003, 74 (1-2) : 24 - 43
  • [47] Sedgwick Eve., 2003, TOUCHING FEELING AFF, DOI DOI 10.1215/9780822384786-005
  • [48] Quiet sustainability: Fertile lessons from Europe's productive gardeners
    Smith, Joe
    Jehlicka, Petr
    [J]. JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES, 2013, 32 : 148 - 157
  • [49] Soaki P, 2017, TRANSFORMATIONS OF GENDER IN MELANESIA, P95
  • [50] Materials that linger: An embodied geography of polyester clothes
    Stanes, Elyse
    Gibson, Chris
    [J]. GEOFORUM, 2017, 85 : 27 - 36