SESAM Brown-bag seminar: Competing Epistemologies: Conservationist Discourses and Guji Oromo’s Sacred Cosmologies

Bring your lunch and join us at the Centre for Sami Studies for a seminar with Asebe Regassa Debelo on the topic “Competing Epistemologies: Conservationist Discourses and Guji Oromo’s Sacred Cosmologies”.

Asebe Regassa will give a presentation on the topic: “Competing Epistemologies: Conservationist Discourses and Guji Oromo’s Sacred Cosmologies”. Photo: Stig Brøndbo

When: Wednesday January 23, 2019, 11:15-12:00

Where: Centre for Sami Studies, Guovssu, TEO H2.228

Associate Professor Asebe Regassa Debelo will give a presentation on the topic: “Competing Epistemologies: Conservationist Discourses and Guji Oromo’s Sacred Cosmologies”.

Abstract:

Due to the ecological challenges faced by many around the globe, environmental conservation has now become an important priority among politicians, academicians, practitioners, and local communities in different cultural and livelihood contexts. Nevertheless, there is no clear consensus about the place of human beings in the environment and the best approach needed to avert ecological problems that arise from anthropogenic factors. While most mainstream Western notions of environmental conservation emphasize a human–nonhuman dualism, most indigenous cosmologies holistically embrace human, nonhuman, and supernatural beings as integral parts or ‘societies of nature’. Moreover, most conceptualizations of nature among indigenous peoples are deeply rooted in their beliefs, norms, values, and customs, which are performed and enacted in rituals that convey profound interconnectedness between humans and nature. Taking Nech Sar National Park in southern Ethiopia as a case study, this paper examines the conflicts and collaborations of different environmental epistemologies, namely the government’s conservationist discourse and local sacred cosmologies. Based on data from ethnographic research conducted among the Guji Oromo of southern Ethiopia, I argue that the Guji Oromo living in the Nech Sar National Park negotiate and/or appropriate governmental conservationist rhetoric as a pragmatic strategy to maneuver the government’s conservation practices for their advantage.

Keywords: Sacred cosmologies, environmentalist cosmologies, nature–culture relations

Asebe Regassa Debelo is an Associate Professor from the Institute of Indigenous Studies at the Dilla University in Etiophia.

- Established a copy of his own UiT-degree (Nyhetssak fra UiT.no)

Open for everyone! Welcome!

When: 23.01.19 at 11.15–12.00
Where: Meeting room 2.228 Guovssu, Centre for Sami Studies
Location / Campus: Tromsø
Target group: Employees, Students, Guests
Contact: Hildegunn Bruland
Phone: +4777645535
E-mail: hildegunn.bruland@uit.no
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