4.5 Article

Fostering horizontal knowledge co-production with Indigenous people by leveraging researchers' transdisciplinary intentions

Journal

ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

RESILIENCE ALLIANCE
DOI: 10.5751/ES-12265-260222

Keywords

co-production of knowledge; Indigenous knowledge; transdisciplinary; horizontal co-production; decolonization

Funding

  1. Global Consortium for Sustainability Outcomes

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The study found that researchers with more experience tend to have a more positive attitude towards horizontal co-production, recognizing colonial dynamics in scientific practices and having stronger behavioral intentions for transdisciplinary cooperation. Structural factors such as disciplinary predispositions, lack of decolonial approaches in academic curricula, and pressures in academia also play a role in influencing researchers' intentions. Personal decisions and actions, such as engaging in transdisciplinary training or forming personal connections with Indigenous culture, are key enablers of horizontal forms of co-production. Understanding researchers' behavioral intentions is crucial in seizing or wasting decolonization opportunities in rapidly advancing fields like sustainability or conservation science.
Transdisciplinarity involves knowledge co-production with non-academics. This co-production can be horizontal when equal consideration is given to the contributions from different knowledges and ways of knowing. However, asymmetric power relations and colonial patterns of behavior, which are deeply rooted in academic culture, may hinder horizontality. Using Icek Ajzen's Theory of Planned Behavior, we elicited and analyzed the attitudes, perceptions, and behavioral intentions towards knowledge co-production of a team of seven Ecuadorian biologists while they were conducting fieldwork in Indigenous communities. All biologists acknowledged the benefits of collaborating with indigenous people. However, researchers with less fieldwork experience held unfavorable attitudes towards knowledge co-production. While all criticized the colonial biases of Ecuadorian society, more experienced participants were the only ones who perceived colonial dynamics as intrinsic to dominant scientific practices, and who expressed favorable attitudes towards horizontal co-production. They also perceived lower social pressure against co-production and greater behavioral control (i. e., greater confidence in their ability to perform co-production) than their peers; all of which confirmed their stronger behavioral intention to perform transdisciplinary co-production. Our analysis identified three structural factors affecting researchers' intentions: (1) disciplinarity predispositions acquired through formal education, (2) lack of decolonial approaches in academic curricula, and (3) pressures in academia to do more in less time. Personal decisions by more experienced participants, such as voluntarily engaging with transdisciplinary training or cultivating personal connections with Indigenous culture, appeared to be key enablers of horizontal forms of co-production. Understanding researchers' behavioral intentions might be key to seize, or waste, the decolonization opportunities brought about by the rapid advance of transdisciplinarity that is taking place in fields like sustainability or conservation science.

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