Conservation Humanities and Multispecies Justice

Humanities Pub Date : 2024-03-01 DOI:10.3390/h13020043
Ursula K. Heise
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Abstract

This article argues that biodiversity conservation is primarily a social and cultural issue and only secondarily a scientific one. It explains the proxy logic of narratives about endangered species, which typically serve as proxies for community identities and the changes communities have undergone through processes of modernization and colonization. Polar bears, whose endangerment is interpreted differently by North American and European audiences, on the one hand, and by Inuit communities, on the other, serve as an example of how endangered species narratives not only involve culture but also, more specifically, issues of multispecies justice. Conservation humanities needs to engage with the two central problems that multispecies justice has identified and grappled with: conflicts between the interests of disadvantaged human communities and nonhuman species and conflicts and trade-offs between the interests of different nonhuman species. The essay argues that adopting the framework of “multispecies justice” rather than “conservation” will help to overcome some of the impasses of interdisciplinary collaboration in environmental studies in the past.
保护人文科学与多物种正义
本文认为,生物多样性保护主要是一个社会和文化问题,其次才是科学问题。文章解释了有关濒危物种的叙述的代理逻辑,这些叙述通常是社区身份以及社区在现代化和殖民化过程中所经历的变化的代理。以北极熊为例,北美和欧洲的受众以及因纽特人社区对北极熊的濒危程度有着不同的解释,这说明濒危物种叙事不仅涉及文化,更具体地说,还涉及多物种正义问题。保护人文学科需要解决多物种正义所发现并努力解决的两个核心问题:弱势人类社区与非人类物种之间的利益冲突,以及不同非人类物种之间的利益冲突与权衡。文章认为,采用 "多物种正义 "而非 "保护 "的框架将有助于克服过去环境研究中跨学科合作的一些障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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