Journal
INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE JOURNAL
Volume 54, Issue 3, Pages 299-+Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1468-2451.00383
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Indigenous knowledge (IK) and citizen science represent parallel discourses which have emerged respectively in southern and northern settings. This paper explores commonalities and differences in how these traditions of work have represented knowledge systems and the engagement of 'other' perspectives with modern science. At the extreme, IK debates emphasise conceptual and moral dissonance and disengagement between knowledge systems, while work on citizen science emphasises it emergence in direct engagement and contest with the science of expert institutions. Both discourses and undermined by arguments that all knowledge is socially produced, dissolving divides between indigenous/scientific, lay/expert knowledge into a plethora of partial perspectives and situated practices among diverse social actors. Nevertheless, this dissolution should not mask real differences in the manners in which knowledge systems are contested: differences reflecting social relations and practices of science and the institutional histories through which they have developed. The paper explores such differences in two cases concerning hunters and national parks in the Caribbean (Trinidad) and West Africa (Guinea), showing how categories such as indigenous and citizen are themselves produced through these same social and historical relations.
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