Memory as Claim-making in Kalahari Socio-environments
LaRocco examines how the San people of Botswana use memory as a form of claim-making to contest their marginal position.
LaRocco examines how the San people of Botswana use memory as a form of claim-making to contest their marginal position.
This volume explores the potential contribution memory studies can make to policymaking, in particular on conservation and disaster resilience.
Content
Allison L. Mayberry, Alice J. Hovorka and Kate E. Evans use qualitative methods to explore human experiences with elephants and perceived impacts of elephants on human well-being in northern Botswana. They emphasize the importance of investigating both visible and hidden impacts of elephants on human well-being to foster holistic understanding of human-elephant conflict scenarios and to inform future mitigation strategies.
This film examines lessons learnt from fracking in the US state of Colorado as the practice quietly expands to protected areas around the world.