Knowledge sovereignty
How communities can own, protect, and benefit from what they know. What governance looks like when knowledge stays with its origin.
It is a space for articles, reflections, reports, and field notes on community knowledge, ecological transition, diaspora belonging, and the politics of transmission.
How communities can own, protect, and benefit from what they know. What governance looks like when knowledge stays with its origin.
How water, soil, food, and coastal systems reveal deeper questions of care and resilience, and who bears the cost of neglect.
How cultural memory travels across languages, geographies, and generations, and how belonging is rebuilt.
Four emails a year with long-form articles, field notes, and programme updates. No more, no less.
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