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Ecological justice for nature in critical systems thinking
journal contribution
posted on 2019-01-01, 00:00 authored by A Stephens, Ann TaketAnn Taket, M Gaglianohe authors of this paper provide a brief overview of the rights-based literature that has been used to produce mechanisms to acknowledge non-human agency in critical systems thinking (CST). With consideration of recent studies of plant cognition, we propose that by recasting CST's underlying commitments, we may produce new ontologies and new ways of working with the embedded stakeholders of socioecological systems. While the discursive shifts are simple, to recast ‘social awareness’ as ‘socioecological awareness’ and ‘human emancipation’ to ‘emancipation’, these changes open up the boundaries, scope and relevance of practice. We see this as a second turn and the next important movement in CST. © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
History
Journal
Systems research and behavioral scienceVolume
36Issue
1Season
January/FebruaryPagination
3 - 19Publisher
WileyLocation
Chichester, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
1092-7026eISSN
1099-1743Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2018, John Wiley & SonsUsage metrics
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Categories
Keywords
Social SciencesManagementSocial Sciences, InterdisciplinaryBusiness & EconomicsSocial Sciences - Other Topicscritical systems thinkingecological feminismcommunity operations researchsocial and ecological justicepluralismARTIFICIAL-INTELLIGENCEPOLITICSCOMMUNICATIONPLANTSENVIRONMENTSPERSPECTIVEPARADIGMSETHICSRIGHTS