A Spatial-Historical Analysis of Agricultural and Protected Land

农业和保护区的时空分析

基本信息

  • 批准号:
    1810025
  • 负责人:
  • 金额:
    $ 7.4万
  • 依托单位:
  • 依托单位国家:
    美国
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant
  • 财政年份:
    2018
  • 资助国家:
    美国
  • 起止时间:
    2018-08-01 至 2019-07-31
  • 项目状态:
    已结题

项目摘要

This award was provided as part of NSF's Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fellowships (SPRF) program and supported by SBE's Cultural Anthropology program. The goal of the SPRF program is to prepare promising, early career doctoral-level scientists for scientific careers in academia, industry or private sector, and government. SPRF awards involve two years of training under the sponsorship of established scientists and encourage Postdoctoral Fellows to perform independent research. NSF seeks to promote the participation of scientists from all segments of the scientific community, including those from underrepresented groups, in its research programs and activities; the postdoctoral period is considered to be an important level of professional development in attaining this goal. Each Postdoctoral Fellow must address important scientific questions that advance their respective disciplinary fields. Under the sponsorship of Dr. Mark Hauser at Northwestern University, this postdoctoral fellowship award supports an early career scientist conducting a spatial-historical analysis of agricultural and protected lands. Through an investigation of landscape changes in a biodiversity hotspot over the last 75 years, this research generates knowledge about 1) the emergence and effects of inequalities in areas marked by conservation and 2) the ways people respond to conservation in their decisions about land and forest use. As economic hardship and land shortages worsen, it is likely that human pressures on the forest will increase. The research offers an understanding of the broader trends that make life difficult for both people and the forest, which is knowledge that can improve current U.S. efforts to support conservation and development. In addition, this project involves researchers and undergraduate research assistants from underrepresented groups in STEM.The project maps the phenomenon by which families no longer have enough land to provide for their basic needs through the largely agricultural means available to them. Specifically, it documents the material record using techniques borrowed from survey archaeology, including GPS-based transect walks; aerial photography, and archival research. The project builds on ethnographic findings to map patterns of population density, land tenure, and land use (crop planting) along the borders of the protected area. The project uses these methods to identify the connections among the establishment of protected areas, population growth, decisions about land, and socio-economic inequality. Moreover, this research produces maps that serve as a bridge between insights from ethnography, archival research, rigorous social theory, and the conservation sciences. Human dimensions of natural resource management is a growing subfield in the environmental sciences, and this project fits squarely into that interdisciplinary endeavor. While conservation scientists have recognized the importance of social research for decades, however, attempts to generate knowledge about human-environment relationships that successfully integrate ecological and social understandings continue to encounter hurdles. This project directly works to overcome those hurdles through a synergistic, multidisciplinary collaboration. It offers a holistic understanding of the broader political-ecological trends shaping prosperity of both the people and the protected forest. The project thus advances knowledge on conservation and natural resources by creating avenues for linguistic, sociocultural, archaeological, and ecological collaboration at the theoretical, methodological, and dissemination stages.This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
该奖项是作为NSF的社会,行为和经济科学博士后研究奖学金(SPRF)计划的一部分提供的,并得到SBE的文化人类学计划的支持。SPRF计划的目标是为学术界,工业或私营部门和政府的科学事业准备有前途的早期职业博士级科学家。SPRF的奖励包括在知名科学家的赞助下进行两年的培训,并鼓励博士后研究员进行独立研究。NSF致力于促进来自科学界各部门的科学家,包括来自代表性不足的群体的科学家参与其研究计划和活动;博士后期间被认为是实现这一目标的专业发展的重要水平。每个博士后研究员必须解决推进各自学科领域的重要科学问题。马克豪瑟在西北大学的赞助下,这个博士后奖学金支持一个早期的职业科学家进行农业和保护土地的空间历史分析。通过对过去75年来生物多样性热点地区景观变化的调查,这项研究产生了以下知识:1)保护区不平等的出现和影响; 2)人们在土地和森林使用决策中对保护的反应方式。随着经济困难和土地短缺的恶化,人类对森林的压力可能会增加。这项研究提供了一个更广泛的趋势,使生活困难的人和森林,这是知识,可以改善目前美国的努力,以支持保护和发展的理解。此外,该项目还涉及STEM领域代表性不足的群体的研究人员和本科生研究助理,该项目描绘了家庭不再拥有足够的土地来通过其现有的主要农业手段满足其基本需求的现象。具体来说,它使用从调查考古学中借来的技术记录了材料记录,包括基于GPS的横断面行走;航空摄影和档案研究。该项目以人种学研究结果为基础,绘制了保护区沿着的人口密度、土地保有权和土地利用(作物种植)模式。该项目使用这些方法来确定建立保护区、人口增长、土地决策和社会经济不平等之间的联系。此外,这项研究产生的地图,作为民族志,档案研究,严格的社会理论和保护科学之间的见解的桥梁。自然资源管理的人文因素是环境科学中一个不断发展的子领域,这个项目正好适合跨学科的奋进。虽然保护科学家几十年来已经认识到社会研究的重要性,但是,试图产生关于人类与环境关系的知识,成功地整合生态和社会的理解继续遇到障碍。该项目直接致力于通过协同、多学科合作克服这些障碍。它提供了一个更广泛的政治生态趋势塑造人民和保护森林的繁荣的整体理解。因此,该项目通过在理论、方法和传播阶段为语言、社会文化、考古和生态合作创造途径,推进了保护和自然资源方面的知识。该奖项反映了NSF的法定使命,并通过使用基金会的智力价值和更广泛的影响审查标准进行评估,被认为值得支持。

项目成果

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Jessica Pouchet其他文献

A Double Standard in Development Encounters: Language and the Making of Green Entrepreneurs in Tanzania
发展遭遇双重标准:语言与坦桑尼亚绿色企业家的培养
  • DOI:
  • 发表时间:
    2022
  • 期刊:
  • 影响因子:
    0.9
  • 作者:
    Jessica Pouchet
  • 通讯作者:
    Jessica Pouchet
Participation, inequality, and conversations about conservation
参与、不平等和有关保护的对话
  • DOI:
    10.1111/josl.12459
  • 发表时间:
    2021
  • 期刊:
  • 影响因子:
    1.9
  • 作者:
    Jessica Pouchet
  • 通讯作者:
    Jessica Pouchet
Negotiating expendability in crisis
谈判危机中的消耗性
  • DOI:
  • 发表时间:
    2022
  • 期刊:
  • 影响因子:
    2.3
  • 作者:
    Jessica Pouchet
  • 通讯作者:
    Jessica Pouchet

Jessica Pouchet的其他文献

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