Tea time: Slowing down academia

How can we change established research structures to better support place-based research? One of
the answers: make time to drink more tea with community partners.

Written by Anna Mayer and edited by Willem Malherbe
Drawing and photo by Anna Mayer

This blog post is part of a series reflecting on a selection of sessions and keynotes that were presented at the PECS-III Conference, Montreal Canada, 12-15 August 2024

In the hustle of academia, it’s easy to forget the value of slowing down. Science often prioritises
publishing one article after another, with speed equated to success. But what if we took more time
to consider the “how” of our research? Marianne Falardeau (Université du Québec, TÉLUQ) and
Patricia Balvanera (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) explored this in their plenary,
“Reflections on place-based social-ecological scholarship.”

Marianne, who collaborates with Indigenous communities in Inuit Nunangat (Inuit homeland in
Canada, corresponding to the Canadian Arctic), shared about her journey in participatory place-
based research 1 . She made an important reflection — the process of place-based research is different
for every community and must be adapted to context. Each community we collaborate with in
research has its own unique history and context, which requires time and attention. Research design
could start with something as simple as drinking tea together, sitting down with potential partners,
get to know each other and share our stories. It’s an act of (un)learning, by taking the time to
understand the history and present realities of the communities we work with, and situating
ourselves in these communities, assessing our own biases and that of our academic disciplines. By
slowing down and deeply listening, we can develop research practices that are sensitive to local
contexts, embrace diverse languages, and develop deep partnerships defined by mutual trust and
respect. This could mean using creative methods to engage with young people or working with
community members to better understand and make space for the cultural and conceptual nuances
underpinning our ways of knowing, valuing and relating to the world around us. Place-based research
is teamwork, as expressed by Patricia.

Patricia complements Marianne’s call for a critical shift in science. It’s time to move away from self-
centred science towards a model that puts communities and the co-creation of knowledge first.
Instead, it becomes a collaborative effort where multiple perspectives are valued and integrated.
Patricia illustrated her points with two positive examples: the global effort of the Intergovernmental
Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) to assess the diverse values of nature 2 , and
Mexico’s Cocina Colaboratorio, a local transdisciplinary collective that brings together artists,
designers, architects, farmer communities, scientists, and chefs to promote sustainable food futures 3 .
Although the IPBES assessment still has a long way to go when it comes to author contributions from
the Global South, both initiatives demonstrate that in social-ecological research, the process is more
important than the product.

Towards the end of research projects, it is important to give back results to the communities we
work with, in formats that resonate with them—be it through films, podcasts or radio. Importantly,
Marianne highlights that beyond giving back results, we can also consider giving back data —
communities are research partners with whom data management agreements can be developed
from the start of projects. Patricia reflects that the joy they received through their community
podcasts proved greater in impact than other ‘outputs’. By slowing down individually but also
collectively in academia, by taking time to (un)learn, will we be able to relearn 4 , i.e. “collectively
contribute to transforming and decolonising academia”. Going above and beyond to ensure that
communities are happy with the ways they are given back research outputs can contribute to this
‘relearning’. It also entails developing spaces for truly horizontal and meaningful engagement, joint
identification of issues at stake, joint experimentation and joint development of products for diverse
audiences.
In the field of social-ecological research, our “team” is not just the colleagues we work with at our
institutions. It includes the people and the natural environments we engage and build relationships
with. Successful research teams are inclusive, interdisciplinary, and rooted in reciprocity. As Patricia
eloquently put it, “love is the key for local and global sustainability”. Love, reciprocity, and respect
are not typically found in the language of grant proposals or academic evaluations, but they are
essential for creating meaningful and impactful research.

Transforming academia requires collective, intentional acts towards slowing things down. By
integrating love and reciprocity in our work, we can shift from extractive knowledge practices to
those that genuinely communicate and value diverse perspectives. But we need funding structures
that support collaborative, community-driven research from the start and reward and evaluation
systems that recognise the importance of process and relationships, not just the final product. That’s
what we have to collectively advocate for.
Global sustainability also lies in the relationships we build along the way that nurture the process of
research and its impact. So, let’s make time for tea, and in doing so, make time for more relational
and caring research practices.

 

1 Use the links if you would like to explore Marianne’s work in projects such as MARAT (Belmont Forum), FISHES
(Genome Canada) and Sentinel North.
2 Take a look at the work that IPBES has done on diverse values.
3 Visit the website of the Cocina Colaboratorio project.

4 Indigenous Connect. (2023, December 6). Disrupting Coloniality: The Decolonial Praxis of Lifelong Learning.
https://indigenousconnect.org/disrupting-coloniality-the-decolonial-praxis-of-lifelong-learning/

Anna Mayer
Anna MayerAuthor
Anna Mayer is a research associate and PhD student at the Institute for Social-Ecological Systems at the University of Lüneburg, Germany, and part of the Biodiversity Exploratories, a research platform dedicated to assessing the impact of different forms of land use on biodiversity and ecosystem processes. Her PhD project focusses on how land managers are influenced by decisions and events outside their region and how this is reflected in land use.
Mia Strand
Mia StrandEditor
Mia Strand is an Nippon Foundation Ocean Nexus Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Nelson Mandela University, who’s research centres around socio-cultural and equity dimensions of ocean governance and conservation. Her research has largely explored the value of arts-based participatory research for more inclusive and equitable ocean governance in South Africa, specifically emphasising the need to better recognise Indigenous and local knowledge systems in decision-making processes.