Juan Antonio Samper
PhD student
The visible and invisible drivers of biocultural loss in the Amazon
Author
Summary, in English
The Amazon is rapidly approaching an ecological tipping point driven by deforestation, forest degradation and global climate change. These are visible issues that receive increasing political and public attention.
However, the accelerating biocultural loss in the Amazon, including the extinction of Indigenous languages, the disruption of Indigenous and local knowledge systems, and the disintegration of culturally embedded livelihoods, remains largely invisible and hardly receives much attention. These losses are compounded by the organized crime and illicit economies that displace communities, alongside the imposition of external conservation and development models on Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities.
We argue that science and policy must move away from reductionist, quantifiable carbon and biodiversity-centred frameworks, to instead recognize and engage with the plurality of Indigenous and local knowledge systems that generate locally relevant and just solutions that safeguard the Amazon's ecological integrity and the well-being of people living in the region.
By linking biodiversity conservation with territorial rights, socioeconomic equity and climate justice, we highlight that the Amazon needs to be understood as a living pluriverse, a place home to multiple worldviews, languages, laws, ontologies, knowledges and management systems where social and ecological vitality are inseparable and interconnected. Meaningful climate and biodiversity outcomes for the Amazon depend on policies that prioritize its biocultural integrity, strengthen territorial rights and local self-governance, and dismantle the systemic drivers that fuel its social-ecological collapse
However, the accelerating biocultural loss in the Amazon, including the extinction of Indigenous languages, the disruption of Indigenous and local knowledge systems, and the disintegration of culturally embedded livelihoods, remains largely invisible and hardly receives much attention. These losses are compounded by the organized crime and illicit economies that displace communities, alongside the imposition of external conservation and development models on Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities.
We argue that science and policy must move away from reductionist, quantifiable carbon and biodiversity-centred frameworks, to instead recognize and engage with the plurality of Indigenous and local knowledge systems that generate locally relevant and just solutions that safeguard the Amazon's ecological integrity and the well-being of people living in the region.
By linking biodiversity conservation with territorial rights, socioeconomic equity and climate justice, we highlight that the Amazon needs to be understood as a living pluriverse, a place home to multiple worldviews, languages, laws, ontologies, knowledges and management systems where social and ecological vitality are inseparable and interconnected. Meaningful climate and biodiversity outcomes for the Amazon depend on policies that prioritize its biocultural integrity, strengthen territorial rights and local self-governance, and dismantle the systemic drivers that fuel its social-ecological collapse
Department/s
- LUCSUS (Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies)
- BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
- LU Profile Area: Nature-based future solutions
- Sociology of Law Department
- LU Profile Area: Human rights
- Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences (MGeo)
- Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
- Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC)
- General Linguistics
Publishing year
2026-04-18
Language
English
Pages
1629-1640
Publication/Series
People and Nature
Volume
8
Issue
6
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Topic
- Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 2575-8314