The evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in Arctic research

Arctic science is often claimed to have been transformed by the increased involvement of local people, but these claims of a new research paradigm have not been empirically evaluated. We argue that the "new" participatory research paradigm emerging in Arctic science embodies many of the pr...

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Main Authors: Brunet, Nicolas D., Hickey, Gordon M., Humphries, Murray M.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art69/
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spelling ftjecolog:oai:.www.ecologyandsociety.org:article/6641 2023-05-15T14:36:28+02:00 The evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in Arctic research Brunet, Nicolas D. Hickey, Gordon M. Humphries, Murray M. 2014-06-26 text/html application/pdf http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art69/ en eng Resilience Alliance Ecology and Society; Vol. 19, No. 2 (2014) civic science; community participation; environmental change; Mode 2; research policy; traditional knowledge Peer-Reviewed Reports 2014 ftjecolog 2019-04-09T11:23:01Z Arctic science is often claimed to have been transformed by the increased involvement of local people, but these claims of a new research paradigm have not been empirically evaluated. We argue that the "new" participatory research paradigm emerging in Arctic science embodies many of the principles of the Mode 2 knowledge production framework. Using the Mode 2 thesis as an assessment framework, we examined research articles appearing between 1965 and 2010 in the journal Arctic to assess the extent to which there has been a paradigm shift toward more participatory approaches. Results suggest that the involvement of local people has increased only slightly over the last half century and continues to vary systematically among disciplines, organizations, and regions. Analysis of three additional journals focused on Arctic and circumpolar science establishes the generality of these slight increases in local involvement. There is clearly room for more community involvement in Arctic science, but achieving this will require either increasing the proportional representation of the organizations, disciplines, and regions with a track record of successful Mode 2 research, or encouraging Mode 2 research innovation within the organizations, disciplines, and regions currently predominated by Mode 1 approaches. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Unknown Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftjecolog
language English
topic civic science; community participation; environmental change; Mode 2; research policy; traditional knowledge
spellingShingle civic science; community participation; environmental change; Mode 2; research policy; traditional knowledge
Brunet, Nicolas D.
Hickey, Gordon M.
Humphries, Murray M.
The evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in Arctic research
topic_facet civic science; community participation; environmental change; Mode 2; research policy; traditional knowledge
description Arctic science is often claimed to have been transformed by the increased involvement of local people, but these claims of a new research paradigm have not been empirically evaluated. We argue that the "new" participatory research paradigm emerging in Arctic science embodies many of the principles of the Mode 2 knowledge production framework. Using the Mode 2 thesis as an assessment framework, we examined research articles appearing between 1965 and 2010 in the journal Arctic to assess the extent to which there has been a paradigm shift toward more participatory approaches. Results suggest that the involvement of local people has increased only slightly over the last half century and continues to vary systematically among disciplines, organizations, and regions. Analysis of three additional journals focused on Arctic and circumpolar science establishes the generality of these slight increases in local involvement. There is clearly room for more community involvement in Arctic science, but achieving this will require either increasing the proportional representation of the organizations, disciplines, and regions with a track record of successful Mode 2 research, or encouraging Mode 2 research innovation within the organizations, disciplines, and regions currently predominated by Mode 1 approaches.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Brunet, Nicolas D.
Hickey, Gordon M.
Humphries, Murray M.
author_facet Brunet, Nicolas D.
Hickey, Gordon M.
Humphries, Murray M.
author_sort Brunet, Nicolas D.
title The evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in Arctic research
title_short The evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in Arctic research
title_full The evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in Arctic research
title_fullStr The evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in Arctic research
title_full_unstemmed The evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in Arctic research
title_sort evolution of local participation and the mode of knowledge production in arctic research
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2014
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art69/
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Ecology and Society; Vol. 19, No. 2 (2014)
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