Artigo

A Comunicação da tradiciência e a comunicação inclusiva para a conservação da sociobiodiversidade na Amazônia

The objective of this work is to understand communication, as science, throughout (IN) the process of tradition, new concept about the study of knowledge diversity relations, being communication as a link between knowledge and an its extensions. The research also reveals inclusive and participatory...

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Autor principal: BATISTA, Mariluz Coelho
Grau: Artigo
Publicado em: 2020
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: https://bdm.ufpa.br:8443/jspui/handle/prefix/2932
Resumo:
The objective of this work is to understand communication, as science, throughout (IN) the process of tradition, new concept about the study of knowledge diversity relations, being communication as a link between knowledge and an its extensions. The research also reveals inclusive and participatory communication as an instrument for valuing socio-biodiversity and resistance to face the problems that plague the traditional populations. The article analyzes the formatting and implementation ways of Belém + 30, the world multi-event that brought together, in Amazonia, the XVI International Congress of Ethnobiology, the XII Brazilian Symposium on Ethnobiology and Ethnoecology, the IX State Science, Technology and Innovation Fair and the I World Socio-Biodiversity Fair, in the city of Belém, State of Pará, Brazil, from August 7 to 10, 2018. From the methodology involving primary and secondary data, local observation and audio and video analysis, it can be concluded that the knowledge relations, in a plural and heterogeneous way, without hierarchy, is a condition of force and power, materializing in the tradition. Communication is fundamental in the visibility of the biodiversity for the sustainability of native communities, environmental preservation and reproduction of life on Earth. In this context, communication, as science, opens paths to give traditional people and communities visibility, on a moment of suppression of rights and new threats in Amazonia.