Literature DB >> 33406988

Politics of Nature: The board game.

Jakob Raffn1, Frederik Lassen2.   

Abstract

Here we introduce the board game Politics of Nature, or PoN as it is now known. Inspired by the work of Bruno Latour, PoN offers an alternative take on co-existence by implementing a flat political ontology in a gamified meeting protocol. PoN does not suggest that humans have no special abilities, only that humans at the outset, are bestowed with no more rights than other kinds of beings. Designed to enable people of all walks of life to playfully unpack and resolve controversies, PoN provides a space where beings can have their existence renegotiated. The aim of PoN is to play as a team to explore and decide on potential good common worlds in which more indispensable beings can exist than if the status quo is continued. By playing PoN iteratively through rounds, each having four stages, the players gradually construct PoN - a planet mirroring 'real worlds'. The four stages provide a novel combination of identification, representation, meditation, prioritization, mapping, individual and group ideation, proposal formulation, and decision-making; only to ask the players to challenge and change PoN to fit their requirements after each round. What follows is taken directly from the manual.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bruno Latour; actor-network theory; cosmopolitics; democracy; governance

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33406988     DOI: 10.1177/0306312720983907

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Stud Sci        ISSN: 0306-3127            Impact factor:   3.885


  1 in total

1.  Introducing a flat ontology into landscape research: a case study of water governance experiments in South Africa.

Authors:  Jakob Raffn; Andreas Aagaard Christensen; Marlene de Witt; Cathie Lewis; Charon Büchner-Marais
Journal:  Landsc Ecol       Date:  2021-11-24       Impact factor: 3.848

  1 in total

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