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Leverhulme Wildfires Guest Webinar on integrated fire management in Mexico

Thu 29 Aug 2024 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM BST Online, MS Teams

Leverhulme Wildfires Guest Webinar on integrated fire management in Mexico

Thu 29 Aug 2024 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM BST Online, MS Teams

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Join this free hybrid seminar with Christoph Neger, from UNAM, on Mexico’s path towards integrated and intercultural fire management.

Thursday 29th August 2024, 3-4pm BST (followed by coffee until 5pm)

Imperial College London (Grantham Institute boardroom) and online (MS Teams)

Title: Slowly but surely: Mexico’s path towards integrated and intercultural fire management


Abstract

Over the last decades, researchers and practitioners have proposed integrated approaches to fire management, which consider fire ecology, and a focus on prevention and risk reduction. In some instances, this has also included a non-prohibitive treatment of traditional fire use by local communities. More recently, academics have started to highlight the importance of empowering communities to take an active role in fostering the resilience of their territories. This includes integrating their traditional and empirical knowledge in fire management strategies in dialogue with scientific and technical advances, resulting in what has been termed intercultural fire management. This presentation analyses how these concepts have been implemented in Mexico, identifying main factors facilitating and hindering them from gaining ground. The information results from revising official documents like laws and strategic plans of governmental organizations, participating in the consultation process for modifying a federal norm on fire use, organizing a workshop for fire managers, and fieldwork in several protected areas. The presentation shows that Mexico started implementing integrated fire management early on and has made significant advances, although resistance and backlashes still exist. Regarding local knowledge, no official mechanisms or programs have yet considered its integration; however, in practice, local fire managers and authorities have developed ways to move toward intercultural fire management.

Speaker Bio

Christoph Neger is a human geographer with a Master's degree from the University of Graz, Austria, and a doctorate from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) in Mexico City. He works as a researcher at the Academic Unit for Territorial Studies Yucatán in Mérida, Mexico, belonging to the UNAM's Institute of Geography. His studies focus on the governance of natural resources and socio-environmental risks, particularly in protected areas. Over the last five years, his main research interest has been the spatial configuration and governance of fire management and fire use in Southeastern Mexico.