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Environmental justice in Natura 2000 conservation conflicts: The case for resident empowerment
Literature concerned with Natura 2000 highlights that conflicts emerged when local communities felt the implementation of the policy was unfair. In the paper, we extend those arguments and say that the contested nature of Natura 2000 conflicts is best understood through a framework of environmental justice that embraces the importance of empowering residents and communities in Natura 2000 processes. We draw from Nancy Fraser’s critical approach that organizes justice issues within distribution, recognition and representation domains simultaneously. It enables us to look at the Natura 2000 conservation conflicts from a critical standpoint of local communities. With it, we conceptualize the role of resident empowerment to compliment examinations of environmental policy conflicts. To re-construct the case of Natura 2000 conservation conflicts through the lens of pluralistic environmental justice perspective, we revisit processes in which a sense of (in)justice about Natura 2000 policy nourished conservation conflicts in Poland. ; National Science Centre, Poland (Narodowe Centrum Nauki) under POLONEZ no. 2016/23/P/HS6/04017 and has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 665778665778.; Jagiellonian.; Jagiellonian University, Department of Biology funding no. DS/WB/INo´S/760/18DS/WB/INo´S/760/18; no. N18/DBS/000003N18/DBS/000003; Project (No. 2015/19/N/HS4/ 003592015/19/N/HS4/00359), financed by the National Science Centre, Poland.
Environmental justice in Natura 2000 conservation conflicts: The case for resident empowerment
Literature concerned with Natura 2000 highlights that conflicts emerged when local communities felt the implementation of the policy was unfair. In the paper, we extend those arguments and say that the contested nature of Natura 2000 conflicts is best understood through a framework of environmental justice that embraces the importance of empowering residents and communities in Natura 2000 processes. We draw from Nancy Fraser’s critical approach that organizes justice issues within distribution, recognition and representation domains simultaneously. It enables us to look at the Natura 2000 conservation conflicts from a critical standpoint of local communities. With it, we conceptualize the role of resident empowerment to compliment examinations of environmental policy conflicts. To re-construct the case of Natura 2000 conservation conflicts through the lens of pluralistic environmental justice perspective, we revisit processes in which a sense of (in)justice about Natura 2000 policy nourished conservation conflicts in Poland. ; National Science Centre, Poland (Narodowe Centrum Nauki) under POLONEZ no. 2016/23/P/HS6/04017 and has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 665778665778.; Jagiellonian.; Jagiellonian University, Department of Biology funding no. DS/WB/INo´S/760/18DS/WB/INo´S/760/18; no. N18/DBS/000003N18/DBS/000003; Project (No. 2015/19/N/HS4/ 003592015/19/N/HS4/00359), financed by the National Science Centre, Poland.
Environmental justice in Natura 2000 conservation conflicts: The case for resident empowerment
Marianna Strzelecka (author) / Marcin Rechcinski (author) / Joanna Tusznio (author) / Arash Akhshik (author) / Małgorzata Grodzinska-Jurczak (author)
2021-08-24
oai:zenodo.org:5242911
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
DDC:
710
Environmental justice in Natura 2000 conservation conflicts : The case for resident empowerment
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