Litcius/Paper detail

Human-Nature Cooperation for Well-Being: Community Understanding on One Health Approach in the COVID-19 Era in the Sundarbans

Rashed Al Mahmud Titumir, Md. Shah Paran

2022Satoyama initiative thematic review11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This study attempts to explore the interdependent relationship between humans and nature, and to comprehend the community understanding of the “One Health” approach in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Sundarbans in Bangladesh. It explores challenges in socio-ecological production landscapes and seascapes (SEPLS) management, response of indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLCs), and corresponding outcomes, and also examines factors affecting the ecosystem’s balance. It particularly draws on the insights of traditional resource users (TRUs) in a part of the Sundarbans who are wood collectors ( Bawali ), fishermen ( Jele ), honey and wax collectors ( Mouali ), and crab collectors. The study adopts a multiple evidence base (MEB) approach in order to bring in the participatory insights of IPLCs, coupled with scientific knowledge and interdisciplinary heterodox perspectives. Based on the community conceptualisation of the One Health approach, this study demonstrates that the appropriation of nature (conservation, restoration, sustainable use, access, and benefit sharing) instead of expropriation (anthropogenic pressures) can serve as a yardstick to ensure a virtuous cycle in the ecosystem and a harmonious relationship between humans and nature. The study presents a modified One Health framework for the post-2020 period that calls for ensuring rights-oriented universal social entitlements, provision of livelihood security, and promotion of human-nature cooperation underwritten by customary sustainable practices and traditional knowledge in SEPLS management.

Topics & Concepts

LivelihoodTraditional knowledgeEnvironmental planningEnvironmental resource managementAppropriationPolitical scienceIndigenousBusinessGeographyEcologyAgricultureEconomicsArchaeologyPhilosophyBiologyLinguisticsConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesGeographies of human-animal interactions