Publicación: Enfoque Bio-Geo-Cultural: una Mirada a las Violencias Interseccionales de Mujeres en el Diálogo Ciencia–Territorio
Fecha
2025
Autores
González-Tejada, Catalina
Marín-Cerón, Maria Isabel
Romero Epiayu, Jazmin
Villazón-Lobo, Karen Cecilia
Ospina-Garcés, Sandra
Delgado-Sánchez, Marisol
Gutiérrez Romero, Genesis
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Editor
UNAC
Resumen
El enfoque bio-geo-cultural ofrece un marco integral que articula las dimensiones biológicas, geológicas y culturales para comprender las interacciones entre la naturaleza, los territorios y las comunidades que los habitan. En el proyecto Tejedoras de la Sostenibilidad en La Guajira —desarrollado en el marco de Mujeres en la Ciencia Orquídeas N°948—, este enfoque permite tender puentes entre la esfera científica-académica y la territorial-comunitaria, visibilizando un entramado de violencias interseccionales que atraviesan las desigualdades de género, territoriales, educativas, ambientales y epistémicas. La propuesta se basa en el diálogo horizontal de saberes entre mujeres científicas y mujeres wayuu, reconociendo que la construcción del conocimiento no se limita a lo técnico, sino que integra saberes ancestrales y experiencias de vida históricamente excluidas. A través de metodologías participativas inspiradas en la ecomuseología y la diplomacia científica, el proyecto aborda la relación entre geodiversidad, biodiversidad y diversidad cultural como base para la sostenibilidad y la justicia socioambiental. El enfoque bio-geo-cultural permite reinterpretar el territorio como un tejido interdependiente de valores naturales y culturales, transformando las violencias en oportunidades de inclusión, resiliencia y acción climática. Desde La Guajira, las mujeres participantes han co-creado narrativas, materiales y estrategias para la gestión sostenible del territorio, demostrando que la ciencia situada y el conocimiento compartido son herramientas poderosas para la equidad, la sostenibilidad y la paz territorial.
The bio-geo-cultural approach provides an integrated framework that articulates biological, geological, and cultural dimensions to understand the interconnections between nature, territories, and the communities inhabiting them. Within the project Weavers of Sustainability in La Guajira —part of Women in Science Orquídeas N°948— this approach bridges academic-scientific and territorial-community spheres, revealing an intricate web of intersectoral violence that intertwines gender, territorial, educational, environmental, and epistemic inequalities. Through horizontal dialogue among scientists and Wayuu women, knowledge creation expands beyond technical-scientific frameworks to include ancestral wisdom and lived experiences of historically marginalized actors. Using participatory methodologies inspired by ecomuseology and scientific diplomacy, the project integrates geodiversity, biodiversity, and cultural diversity as the foundation for sustainability and socio-environmental justice. The bio-geo-cultural approach redefines the territory as an interdependent fabric of natural and cultural values, transforming structural violence into opportunities for inclusion, resilience, and climate action. From La Guajira, women have co-created narratives, materials, and territorial strategies that highlight how situated science and co-produced knowledge can strengthen equity, sustainability, and peacebuilding processes
The bio-geo-cultural approach provides an integrated framework that articulates biological, geological, and cultural dimensions to understand the interconnections between nature, territories, and the communities inhabiting them. Within the project Weavers of Sustainability in La Guajira —part of Women in Science Orquídeas N°948— this approach bridges academic-scientific and territorial-community spheres, revealing an intricate web of intersectoral violence that intertwines gender, territorial, educational, environmental, and epistemic inequalities. Through horizontal dialogue among scientists and Wayuu women, knowledge creation expands beyond technical-scientific frameworks to include ancestral wisdom and lived experiences of historically marginalized actors. Using participatory methodologies inspired by ecomuseology and scientific diplomacy, the project integrates geodiversity, biodiversity, and cultural diversity as the foundation for sustainability and socio-environmental justice. The bio-geo-cultural approach redefines the territory as an interdependent fabric of natural and cultural values, transforming structural violence into opportunities for inclusion, resilience, and climate action. From La Guajira, women have co-created narratives, materials, and territorial strategies that highlight how situated science and co-produced knowledge can strengthen equity, sustainability, and peacebuilding processes