North–South Dialogue on Territorial Policies and Discourses: Insights for the Future of Nature Conservation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Territorial Perspectives of the European Union
3.1.1. Context: The European Integration Process
3.1.2. The European Spatial Development Perspective: Towards a Balanced and Sustainable Development of the Territory of the European Union
3.1.3. The European Territorial Agendas: Towards an Inclusive, Smart and Sustainable Europe of Diverse Regions
3.2. Emerging Latin American Focuses
3.2.1. Context: Extractivism, Popular Movements and Post-Development
3.2.2. Good Living: From Anthropocentrism to Biopluralism
3.2.3. Territorial Feminisms: Defending Body–Land–Territory
4. Discussion
4.1. Initiating a Dialogue between European–Latin American Perspectives and the Strategic Plan 2011–2020 of the Convention on Biological Biodiversity
4.1.1. Nature and Development Discourses
4.1.2. Territorial Perspectives
4.2. Key Commonalities: Bridges and Possible Contributions of the European–Latin American Territorial Dialogue to the Future of Conservation
5. Final Remarks
- (i)
- Territorialisation of nature conservation
- To emphasise the articulation between conservation policies, land use and spatial planning;
- To make recommendations consistent with regional diversities and concerns from geographical and historical perspectives;
- To promote place-based conservation strategies aimed at territorial cohesion and a just territorial transition, the construction of community feeling among people and with nature;
- To visualise conservation from a microscale point of view, i.e., as care for the body/family.
- (ii)
- To broaden and deepen the sense of justice
- To strengthen social, environmental and historical justice as a core goal of conservation;
- To recognise nature as a subject of rights;
- To judge nature degradation as violence (by developing the concept of environmental crime, including the idea of ecocide as a category of international crime, and the link with human rights);
- To give importance to all the dimensions of justice (distributional, restorative, recognitional and procedural).
- (iii)
- To promote a critical–epistemological discussion
- To establish a critical view of the aspiration to development and instrumental conception of nature with recognition of alternative perceptions such as Good Living and territorial feminisms;
- To foment complex relational spatial, temporal and multidimensional thinking that integrates notions such as ‘bioculturality’ into policy formulation and evaluation;
- To incorporate transdisciplinary targets and assessments by emphasising the role and contributions of social sciences and alternative types of knowledge to nature conservation.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Case Study | Year | Title | Scope | Abbreviation | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Europe | 1999 | European Spatial Development Perspective: Towards Balanced and Sustainable Development of the Territory of the European Union | European Union | ESDP 1999 | [47] |
2007 | Territorial Agenda of the European Union | European Union | TAEU 2007 | [48] | |
2008 | Green Paper on Territorial Cohesion: Turning territorial diversity into strength | European Union | Green Paper 2008 | [49] | |
2011 | Territorial Agenda of the European Union 2020: Towards an inclusive, smart and sustainable Europe of diverse regions | European Union | TAEU 2020 | [50] | |
2020 | Territorial Agenda 2030: A future for all places | European Union | TAEU 2030 | [51] | |
Latin America | 2006 | National Development Plan 2006–2011 | Bolivia (Evo Morales Government) | Bolivia Plan 2006 | [52] |
2009 | National Plan for Good Living 2009–2013 | Ecuador (Rafael Correa Government) | Ecuador Plan 2009 | [53] | |
2012 | Patria Plan (2013–2019) | Venezuela (Hugo Chávez Government) | Venezuela Plan 2012 | [54] | |
2012 | Political Agenda of Indigenous Mexican Women | Mexico (National Coordinator of Indigenous Women—CONAMI) | CONAMI 2012 | [45] | |
2015 | Five-Year Development Plan 2015–2019 | El Salvador (Salvador Sanchez Cerén Government) | El Salvador Plan 2015 | [55] | |
2019 | Latin American Women in Conservation Agenda | Latin America (Network of Women in Conservation of Latin America and the Caribbean) | WCN 2019 | [46] | |
Global | 2010 | Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011–2020 | Global (Convention on Biological Biodiversity) | CBD 2010 | [56] |
Overarching Objectives | A Just Europe | A Green Europe |
---|---|---|
That Offers Future Perspectives for All Places and People | That Protects Common Livelihoods and Shapes Societal Transition | |
Priorities | 1. Balanced Europe | 4. Healthy Environment |
Better balanced territorial development using Europe’s diversity | Better ecological livelihoods, climate-neutral and resilient towns, cities and regions | |
2. Functional Regions | 5. Circular Economy | |
Convergent local and regional development, less inequality between places | Strong and sustainable local economies in a globalised world | |
3. Integration Beyond Borders | 6. Sustainable Connections | |
Easier living and working across national borders | Sustainable digital and physical connectivity of places |
Latin America | European Union | CBD Plan 2010–2020 | |
---|---|---|---|
Mission/goals | To preserve the autonomy, integrity and defence of territory in the face of foreign interests; To recover community life in harmony with nature | To promote territorial cohesion and achieve a balanced and sustainable development between EU regions | Vision: ‘living in harmony with nature’ Goals: 1—Biodiversity conservation; 2—Sustainable use; 3—Equitable distribution of benefits of genetic resources |
Conception of nature | Nature as a political subject with its own rights; Degradation of nature understood as violence | Nature as a service provider; Degradation of nature understood as severe risks to ecosystems and population’s quality of life | Nature as a service provider; One mention of the word ‘nature’ (convention motto); Preferential use of biodiversity and ecosystems |
Conception of territory | Territory with a decolonial sense of community, identity and resistance. | Territory as capital assets and its diversity as a strength for potential development | No mention of the concept of territory; Depoliticised approach to conservation; Origin of the concept of OECMs (other effective area-based conservation measures) |
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Degele, P.E.; Pedregal, B. North–South Dialogue on Territorial Policies and Discourses: Insights for the Future of Nature Conservation. Land 2022, 11, 994. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11070994
Degele PE, Pedregal B. North–South Dialogue on Territorial Policies and Discourses: Insights for the Future of Nature Conservation. Land. 2022; 11(7):994. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11070994
Chicago/Turabian StyleDegele, Pamela E., and Belén Pedregal. 2022. "North–South Dialogue on Territorial Policies and Discourses: Insights for the Future of Nature Conservation" Land 11, no. 7: 994. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11070994
APA StyleDegele, P. E., & Pedregal, B. (2022). North–South Dialogue on Territorial Policies and Discourses: Insights for the Future of Nature Conservation. Land, 11(7), 994. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11070994