Citizen science as democratic innovation that renews environmental monitoring and assessment for the sustainable development goals in rural areas
Author
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Alarcón Ferrari, Cristian
Author
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Jönsson, Mari
Author
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Gebreyohannis Gebrehiwot, Solomón
Author
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Chiwona Karltun, Linley
Author
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Mark Herbert, Cecilia
Author
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Manuschevich Vizcarra, Daniela Ilona
Author
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Powell, Neil
Author
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Do, Thao
Author
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Bishop, Kevin
Author
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Hilding Rydevik, Tuija
Admission date
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2021-12-06T14:17:18Z
Available date
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2021-12-06T14:17:18Z
Publication date
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2021
Cita de ítem
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Sustainability 2021, 13, 2762
es_ES
Identifier
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10.3390/su13052762
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/183058
Abstract
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This commentary focuses on analyzing the potential of citizen science to address legitimacy
issues in the knowledge base used to guide transformative governance in the context of the United
Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (henceforth SDGs). The commentary develops two interrelated
arguments for better understanding the limits of what we term “traditional” Environmental
Monitoring and Assessment (EMA) as well as the potential of citizen science (CS) for strengthening
the legitimacy of EMA in the local implementation of SDGs. We start by arguing that there is an
urgent need for a profound renewal of traditional EMA to better implement the SDGs. Then, we
present CS as a democratic innovation that provides a path to EMA renewal that incorporates, develops,
and extends the role of CS in data production and use by EMA. The commentary substantiates
such arguments based on current approaches to CS and traditional EMA. From this starting point,
we theorize the potential of CS as a democratic innovation that can repurpose EMA as a tool for
the implementation of the SDGs. With a focus on the implementation of SDG15 (Life on Land) in
local contexts, the commentary presents CS as a democratic innovation for legitimate transformative
governance that can affect socio-ecological transitions. We see this approach as especially appropriate
to analyze the implementation of SDGs in rural settings where a specific resource nexus can
create conflict-laden contexts with much potential for a renewed EMA to support transformative
governance towards Agenda 2030.
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Patrocinador
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Swedish Research Council Formas 2018-02341
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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MDPI
es_ES
Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States