COMCHA
Community-based change: local and traditional knowledges in NBS
The goal of this project is to study how community knowledge and practices, constituting a form of non-conventional NBS, can contribute to leveraging regenerative processes aligned with the goals of the European Green Deal and the European Partnership for Biodiversity. Fostering mutual learning between European contexts and Overseas Countries on issues such as community engagement, co-governance, just redistribution of natural resources and community-based solutions for adaptation to environmental challenges, this project aims to identify blind spots in universalised approaches to NBS, collecting a set of features able to enhance and leverage processes of co-creation and collective implementation. Analysing community-driven nature-based solutions in threatened lands for socio-environmental issues, the following assumptions underlie this proposal:
- traditional and local knowledges may play a pivotal role in community processes of change associated with regenerative food systems, inclusive urban regeneration and adaptation to environmental challenges;
- transformative change theory may benefit from theoretical and methodological refreshment coming from a process of intercultural translation, with mutual learnings between European and Overseas countries, particularly with regard to the pressure of anthropogenic drivers of biodiversity loss;
- indigenous and other traditional practices not only bring new perspectives to the concept of transformative change but also foster a new look at a set of popular-based technologies of production aligned with biodiversity.
Resulting from an intercultural dialogue regarding these three key perspectives and committed to enhancing the processes of co-creation, implementation and maintenance, we will create a set of qualitative criteria to refine NBS's evaluation and monitoring processes. In this way, to address these main ideas, the COMCHA project will focus on the main study areas: rural settlements, urban poor communities (favelas), peri and semi-urban areas, isolated rural communities, peripheral islands (located in Macaronesia) and indigenous communities. Three Research Nodes (RNs) (Food Systems, Alternative Urbanism and Technology production) constitute the assemblages in which knowledge sharing happens, anticipating the key elements that will be part of policy recommendations.
The research nodes will be co-implemented to share the analyses on cases and contexts between the universities and the communities and the communities themselves. This partnership will be coordinated by an experienced team in European research on NBSs through co-creation and participation processes, and gathers partners from Europe and Brazil, from academic and non-academic sectors.
- UNIVERSITY OF ICELAND (UOI)
- UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL DE PONTA GROSSA (UEPG)
- UNIVERSITY OF EXTREMADURA (Uex)
- AZOREAN BIODERSITY GROUP CE3C – CENTER FOR ECOLOGY, EVOLUTION AND ENVIROMENTAL CHANGES/UNIVERSITY OF AZORES (GBA /Uaç)
- SINTROPICO (SINTROPICO)
- UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI FIRENZE (UNIFI)
- INSTITUTO FEDERAL DE EDUCAÇÃO, CIÊNCIA E TECNOLOGIA DO ESPÍRITO SANTO (Ifes)
- UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO SUL DA BAHIA (UFSB)
- FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE DO SUL (UFRGS)
- FEDERAL UNIVERISTY OF RIO DE JANEIRO (UFRJ)
- UNIVERSITY OF SZEGED (USZ)
