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003 | OSt | ||
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008 | 220906b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
100 |
_aFortun, Kim _947909 |
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245 |
_aKnowledge infrastructure and research agendas for quotidian Anthropocenes: _bCritical localism with planetary scope |
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260 |
_bsage _c2021 |
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300 | _aVol 8, Issue 2, 2021 : (169-182 p.). | ||
520 | _aThe Anthropocene requires the development of new forms of knowledge and supporting sociotechnical infrastructure. While there have been calls for both interdisciplinary and community-engaged approaches, there remains a need to develop, test, and sustain modes of Anthropocene knowledge production that effectively link people working at different scales, in different sites, with many different types of expertise. In this Perspectives piece, we describe one such approach to Anthropocene knowledge production, centered in short-term Field Campuses that bring together community actors in cultural institutions, media, and government agencies with external academic researchers, bringing cultural analysis into the work of characterizing and responding to the Anthropocene. We argue that it is important to build public knowledge infrastructure that allows people to visualize and address many intersecting scales and systems (ecological, atmospheric, economic, technological, social, cultural, etc.) that shape the Anthropocene at the local level. | ||
650 |
_acollaboration, _952683 |
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650 |
_acultural analysis, _952684 |
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650 |
_afield research, _947914 |
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650 |
_ainterdisciplinarity, _947910 |
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650 |
_aknowledge infrastructure _952685 |
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700 |
_aAdams, James _952723 |
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700 |
_a Schütz, Tim _952724 |
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700 |
_aKnowles, Scott Gabriel _952725 |
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773 | 0 |
_010524 _915375 _dSage Pub. 2019 - _tAnthropocene review/ _x2053-020X |
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856 | _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/20530196211031972 | ||
942 |
_2ddc _cART |
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999 |
_c12926 _d12926 |