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Interactions of formal and informal knowledge systems in village-based tree management in central India
Authors:Sonja B Brodt
Institution:(1) Program on Environment, East-West Center, Honolulu, Hawawii, USA
Abstract:This study critiques the idea of a ldquoWestern science -- indigenous knowledgerdquo dichotomy in agricultural knowledge by examining the hybrid nature of knowledge use and incorporation by villagers in Madhya Pradesh, India. By analyzing knowledge systems as multi-leveled structures consisting of concrete practices linked to more abstract, explanatory concepts, this paper illustrates how information from multiple sources is integrated into local bodies of knowledge about tree management. Practices such as urea fertilization from formal global science might be explained by concepts such as that of a hot/cold duality from informal folk science. Similarly, other pieces of knowledge stemming from diverse knowledge systems are shown to become mixed and matched on practical and conceptual levels. Additionally, several knowledge elements used locally appear to be held in common by many knowledge systems around the world, rendering the determination of their origins in one system or another nearly impossible. These observations lead to the conclusion that local knowledge systems of tree management are better characterized as ldquoopenrdquo systems rather than distinct, ldquoclosedrdquo systems. Furthermore, the constant exchange of material between formal and informal, local and global systems renders untenable any strict dichotomy of knowledge systems.
Keywords:Agroforestry  Environmental cognition  Ethnobotany  Indigenous knowledge  Madhya Pradesh
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