迈向时间性的政治生态学:超越定居者时间的土著路径

Towards a political ecology of temporalities: Indigenous pathways beyond settler time

Global Environmental Change · 2026
被引 0
ABS 3

中文导读

本文提出时间性的政治生态学框架,分析加拿大Tłı̨chǫ原住民的时间观如何挑战定居者线性时间,为气候行动提供替代路径。

Abstract

The global climate crisis is defined by a profound temporal misalignment: while the physical reality of climate change accelerates through non-linear tipping points and non-negotiable deadlines, political and economic responses remain trapped in linear, short-term cycles. Despite the palpable urgency of rising temperatures, dominant temporal regimes fail to arrest emissions. This is due in part to the ontological and epistemological separation of socio-cultural and biophysical time. To analyze this disconnect, we articulate a political ecology of temporalities which centers power relations in the imposition and contestation of environmental time regimes. We bring this framework into conversation with the Tłı̨chǫ First Nation in Northern Canada, examining how Indigenous temporalities offer a counter-narrative to hegemonic settler-colonial time. Building off the work of Coline Ruwet, our findings reveal that Tłı̨chǫ resilience relies on “time perceived” (embodied, cyclical ecological knowledge) and “time imagined” (cultural foresight), contrasting sharply with the anxieties produced by Western technical planning. We conclude that equitable climate action requires reconciling with power in temporalities by centering Indigenous ontologies that align socio-cultural rhythms with biophysical realities. Our articulation of a political ecology of temporalities offers a theoretical advance in this direction.

政治生态学土著研究环境时间气候变化定居者殖民主义