Book Details
Orange Code:91892
Paperback:374 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. Politicizing Environmental Explanations: What Can Political Ecology Learn from Sociology and Philosophy of Science? - Tim Forsyth2. Debating the Science of Using Marine Turtles: Boundary Work among Species Experts - Lisa M. Campbell3. Technobiological Imaginaries: How Do Systems Biologists Know Nature? - Joan H. Fujimura4. Agency, Structuredness, and the Production of Knowledge within Intersecting Processes - Peter J. Taylor5. “We Don’t Harvest Animals; We Kill Them”: Agricultural Metaphors and the Politics of Wildlife Management in the Yukon - Paul Nadasdy6. Political Violence and Scientific Forestry: Emergencies, Insurgencies,and Counterinsurgencies in Southeast Asia - Peter Vandergeest and Nancy LeePeluso7. Spatial-Geographic Models of Water Scarcity and Supply in Irrigation Engineering and Management: Bolivia, 1952–2009 - Karl S. Zimmerer8. Rooted Networks, Webs of Relation, and the Power of Situated Science: Bringing the Models Back Down to Earth in Zambrana - Dianne Rocheleau9. Circulating Science, Incompletely Regulating Commodities: Governing from a Distance in Transnational Agro-Food Networks - Ryan E. Galt10. Experiments as “Performances”: Interpreting Farmers’ Soil Fertility Management Practices in Western Kenya - Joshua J. Ramisch
Description:
Political ecology and science studies have found fertile meeting ground in environmental studies. While the two distinct areas of inquiry approach the environment from different perspectives—one focusing on the politics of resource access and the other on the construction and perception of knowledge—their work is actually more closely aligned now than ever before.
Knowing Nature brings together political ecologists and science studies scholars to showcase the key points of encounter between the two fields and how this intellectual mingling creates a lively and more robust ecological framework for the study of environmental politics. The contributors all actively work at the interface between these two fields, and here they use empirical material to explore questions of theoretical and practical import for understanding the politics that surround nature-society relations, from wildlife management in the Yukon to soil fertility in Kenya. In addition, they examine how various environmental knowledge claims are generated, packaged, promoted, and accepted (or rejected) by the different actors involved in specific cases of environmental management, conservation, and development. Finally, they ask what is at stake in the struggles surrounding environmental knowledge, how such struggles shape conceptions of the environment, and whose interests are served in the process.
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