@ntnsndr I hear that! The difference is the lack of the original custodians of the land.
I agree that, as another way of demanding attention, it continues to be a tool of colonialization. I just argue that it is another tool itself, not an incursion on native land.
"Governable spaces must calibrate what they expect of people to a condition of metagovernance, of traversing multiple, plural governance environments in a way that is sustainable, tolerable, and comprehensible."
I think this requires higher policy changes between platforms, depending on the space. I think we've seen this sort of result come from cultural movements. CoCs spring to mind.
OpenSource #OpenScience #OpenAccess, #birds and #birding, #inaturalist #ebird #Latin, #languages #linguistics and #conlangs, hiking and mountaineering, travel and politics.- Co-Organizer of CURIOSS @curioss and SustainOSS @sustainoss.- PhD student at Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington in Pōneke Wellington, Aotearoa NZ- Professional constructed linguist- eBird reviewerHe/him. Grew up on unceded Abenaki land.