Article ID: CBB753021332

Rhizomic learning: How environmental non-governmental organizations (ENGOs) acquire and assemble knowledge (October 2020)

unapi

It has been a common assumption that the knowledge practices of environmental organisations (ENGOs) is largely based on interaction with environmental research. Implied in such assumptions is the idea that ENGOs are so-called boundary organizations brokering knowledge between science and environmental policy decision-making. In this article, we challenge this belief. Through interviews, we have investigated the practices of ENGO employees as they acquire and assemble knowledge they need in their involvement with environmental policymakers. From their accounts, these ENGOs are not boundary organizations. Science is important but such knowledge was usually acquired indirectly and appeared to be seen as ubiquitous in the environmental policy community. We found that the knowledge practices were based on what we call rhizomic learning. We introduce this concept to highlight the complexity, opacity and non-linearity of the ways in which ENGO actors acquire and assemble environmental knowledge. We found that this rhizomic learning is characterized by five main features: 1) diversity of sources and the importance of networks, 2) pragmatism, 3) opacity of the process, 4) community among involved actors, and 5) mediation. ENGO actors expected that their capacity for rhizomic learning – not the least the purposeful mediation and assembly of knowledge from a multitude of sources – would make them appear to policymakers as competent, relevant and reliable.

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Authors & Contributors
Eleonora Barelli
Laura Branchetti
Jeon, June
Siri Lamoureaux
Shana Lee Hirsch
Pandey, Poonam
Journals
Science, Technology and Human Values
Social Studies of Science
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte
Science as Culture
Science and Education
Publishers
Springer
Routledge
MIT Press
Intellect
Concepts
Environmental sciences
Technoscience; science and technology studies
Learning
Climate change
Scientists
Non-governmental organizations
People
Nightingale, Florence
Heidegger, Martin
Baldwin, James Mark
Time Periods
21st century
20th century
19th century
20th century, late
Places
United States
Columbia River
Indonesia
Sudan
Norway
European Union
Institutions
International Council for Science
Future Earth. Systems of Sustainable Consumption and Production Knowledge-Action Network
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