日本地球惑星科学連合2023年大会

講演情報

[J] 口頭発表

セッション記号 H (地球人間圏科学) » H-GG 地理学

[H-GG01] 自然資源・環境に関する地球科学と社会科学の対話

2023年5月22日(月) 10:45 〜 12:15 201A (幕張メッセ国際会議場)

コンビーナ:大月 義徳(東北大学大学院理学研究科地学専攻環境地理学講座)、上田 元(一橋大学・大学院社会学研究科)、古市 剛久(森林総合研究所)、佐々木 達(法政大学)、座長:古市 剛久(森林総合研究所)、佐々木 達(法政大学)

11:30 〜 11:45

[HGG01-09] 三角関係再考:自然科学と社会に関する社会科学的考察

*上田 元1大月 義徳2古市 剛久3佐々木 達4 (1.一橋大学・大学院社会学研究科、2.東北大学大学院理学研究科地学専攻環境地理学講座、3.森林総合研究所、4.法政大学)

キーワード:社会科学、環境安全保障、付随的/随伴的保全

This presentation expands the social scientific interests in the relationships between natural/social sciences and the society from the presentation titled "A social scientific consideration on the triangular relationships among natural sciences, social sciences and the society" at JpGU 2022. The dialogue-oriented contribution exemplified triangular relationships between natural sciences, social sciences, and the society, from a social scientific understanding. The triangle consists of three opposite sides (subtenses) seen from a vertex, and a social scientific vertex views the relationships between the society and natural sciences (or human-natural resource relations), when examining how the society employs environmental security arguments (for instance, Bocchi et al. 2006) in depoliticising and justifying external/military intervention in "natural resource-based conflicts" (Peluso and Watts 2001, Le Billon 2001). Second, the 2022 presentation argued that in the same environmental security arguments, the society looked into the debate between natural and social sciences in seeking simple, deterministic, and essentialist understanding of the connection between the nature and the society (for instance, the former French President Hollande's statement at the COP21 Paris Conference, November-December 2015, that the fight against global warming and the fight against terrorism cannot be separated). Third, another example was given to show that natural scientific consideration had significant insights on the relationships between social sciences and the society. In the discussion on epiphenomenal conservation (Alvard 1994, 1995, 1998) and issues of local/indigenous knowledge (Fennell 2008), we learn how social scientific understanding of the "ecologically-noble" knowledge of a society utilising natural resources can simplistically romanticise their "sustainable" relationship. The presentation at JpGU 2023 continues to stimulate discussion on these triangular relationships, focusing on cases in a dialogue between natural and social scientists, and examines how we need to be careful in facing the triangular relationships so as not to simplistically generalise from a particular phenomenon in a particular time-space setting and scale.

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Bocchi, S., Disperati, S.P. and Rossi, S. (2006): Environmental security: a geographic information system analysis approach - the case of Kenya. Environmental Management, 37(2): 186-199.
Fennell, D. A. (2008): Ecotourism and the myth of indigenous stewardship. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 16 (2): 129-149.
Le Billon, P. (2001): The political ecology of war: natural resources and armed conflicts. Political Geography, 20: 561-584.
Peluso, N. L., and Watts, M. (2001): Violent environments. In Peluso, N. L., and Watts, M. eds., Violent environments. Cornell University Press, 3-38.