Bio-invasions, Biodiversity, and Biocultural Diversity: Some Problems with These Concepts for Historians
This article looks at whether biocultural diversity be developed as a more totalising idea that is useful for historians.
This article looks at whether biocultural diversity be developed as a more totalising idea that is useful for historians.
Conservation areas within the Korean demilitarized zone generate new “natures” that are deeply political and enmeshed in evolving relations among humans and nonhumans, as seen using the example of migratory cranes.
Ursula Münster shows us in her essay on silenced and silent practices of avian care in a postcolonial conservation landscape of South India, that care is never innocent, it plays out within established hierarchies and power relations, and it can reinforce long traditions of imperialism and exclusion.
Susanne Schmitt explores the multifaceted ways in which the Syngnathid family is caught up in networks of care and storytelling.