Decolonizing Botany: Indonesia, UNESCO, and the Making of a Global Science

被引:0
作者
Andrew Goss
机构
[1] Augusta University,Department of History, Anthropology, and Philosophy
来源
Journal of the History of Biology | 2023年 / 56卷
关键词
Botany; Indonesia; Decolonization; Internationalism; Scientific cooperation; UNESCO;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Decolonization created new opportunities for international scientific research collaboration. In Indonesia this began in the late 1940s, as Indonesian scientists and officials sought to remake the formerly colonial botanical gardens in the city of Bogor into an international research center. Indonesia sponsored the Flora Malesiana project, a flora of all of island Southeast Asia. This project was formally centered in Bogor, Indonesia, with participation from tropical botanists from around the world. The international orientation of Indonesian science led to the establishment of one of UNESCO’s Field Science Co-operation Offices in Jakarta, and to a period of close collaboration between Indonesian botanists and UNESCO. This paper examines the importance of UNESCO’s Humid Tropics research program, which initially provided further opportunities for Indonesian botanists to participate in international scientific networks. The paper concludes by showing that the Humid Tropics program led to the slow erosion of Indonesian agency and authority over tropical botany, and the assertion of Western control and management over tropical botany research.
引用
收藏
页码:495 / 523
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Making Indonesia Canada's strategic partner [J].
Dyck, Kevin .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2025, 80 (02) :282-299
[42]   Theories, models, and best practices for decolonizing global health through experiential learning [J].
Hawks, Steven R. ;
Hawks, Jenna L. ;
Sullivan, Heather S. .
FRONTIERS IN EDUCATION, 2023, 8
[43]   Owning our madness: Contributions of Jamaican psychiatry to decolonizing Global Mental Health [J].
Hickling, Frederick W. .
TRANSCULTURAL PSYCHIATRY, 2020, 57 (01) :19-31
[44]   Decision making criteria for adaptive reuse strategy in UNESCO world heritage city [J].
Mohamed, Noorzalifah ;
Alauddin, Kartina .
JOURNAL OF FACILITIES MANAGEMENT, 2023, 21 (02) :169-181
[45]   Nano Science and Technology Development and Their Applications in Indonesia [J].
Barmawi, M. .
THIRD NANOSCIENCE AND NANOTECHNOLOGY SYMPOSIUM 2010 - NNSB2010, 2010, 1284 :1-4
[46]   Decolonizing technoscience in northern Scandinavia: the role of scholarship in Sami emancipation and the indigenization of Western science [J].
Wrakberg, Urban ;
Granqvist, Karin .
JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2014, 44 :81-92
[47]   GLOBAL CULTURAL GOVERNANCE. DECISION-MAKING CONCERNING WORLD HERITAGE BETWEEN POLITICS AND SCIENCE [J].
Schmitt, Thomas M. .
ERDKUNDE, 2009, 63 (02) :103-121
[48]   CAS Paleontologist Presented with L'Oréal-UNESCO Award for Women in Science [J].
CHEN Pingfu ;
SONG Jianlan .
Bulletin of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, 2018, (01) :5-9
[49]   The contributions of UNESCO Man and Biosphere Programme and biosphere reserves to the practice of sustainability science [J].
Maureen G. Reed .
Sustainability Science, 2019, 14 :809-821
[50]   The contributions of UNESCO Man and Biosphere Programme and biosphere reserves to the practice of sustainability science [J].
Reed, Maureen G. .
SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE, 2019, 14 (03) :809-821