This insight episode comes from full episode eighty with Arun Agrawal.
Arun is the Samuel Trask Dana Professor at the School for Environment and Sustainability at the University of Michigan, and he has played an important role in the development of the Commons field and related areas of conservation and development.
Arun talks with Michael and Stefan about top-down versus bottom-up governance, and how people’s identity informs how they view the world. Arun also discusses how comanagement is not just a category, but a descriptor of the world around us, and the importance of understanding nuance rather than looking for binaries.
Arun’s website: http://www.arunagrawal.org/
093: Complexity and the Subaks of Bali with Steve Lansing
Insight Episode #35: Jessica Gephart on seafood trade discrepancies
092: Sustainable development with Kaitlin Cordes
091: Marine conservation in Haiti with Jean Wiener
IJC#5: Guiding would-be institutional crafters with Jim Sinner
Insight #34: Beatriz Dos Santos Dias on modeling and historical ecology
090: Histories of disease and its links to urban planning with Aditya Ramesh
089: Biocultural relationships with Noa Kekuewa Lincoln
IJC #4: Historical commons in the Low Lands with Maurice Paulissen
088: Institutional and behavioral economics with Achim Schlüter
Insight #33: Irina Rafliana on the importance of language
087: Complexity and the commons with Simon Levin
Insight #32: Helen Rozwadowski on the ocean as a mirror
086: Environmental history with Mahesh Rangarajan
Insight #31: Chris Weible on the value of studying the policy process
085: Vulnerability and adaptation with Hallie Eakin
Insight #30: Cassandra Brooks on marine protected areas and international geopolitics in Antarctica
084: Seeing like a Pastoralist with Mark Moritz
Insight #29: Emma McKinley on the Marine Social Science Network
083: Participatory governance with Daniel Decaro
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Poetry of Science
Behavioral Grooves Podcast
Hidden Brain
Something You Should Know
The Science of Happiness