Settler ecologies and more-than-One Health: From malaria to avian flu in the Hula Valley, Palestine-Israel

Irus Braverman
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Abstract

The story of the Hula Valley in the Galilee region of Palestine-Israel serves as the focus of this article, which draws on the concepts “more-than-One Health” and “settler ecologies” to highlight the harmful ecological implications of settler colonial projects in this region and elsewhere. Specifically, I tell the story of the Zionist drying of the Hula wetlands in the 1950s for the purpose of fighting off malaria and advancing agriculture in the region—and then of Israel's reflooding and rehabilitation of parts of the Hula in the 1990s in support of the massive annual bird migration. In winter 2021, more than eight thousand cranes succumbed to an avian influenza (H5N1) outbreak in the Hula Valley and over one million chickens in the area's coops had to be culled. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted mainly in summer 2022, this article discusses the historical and socioecological conditions that have arguably enabled and exacerbated the avian outbreak, advocating for a more-than-One Health approach that is founded on acknowledging the settler colonial legacies of this place.
定居者生态与 "不止一种健康":从巴勒斯坦-以色列胡拉山谷的疟疾到禽流感
本文以巴勒斯坦-以色列加利利地区胡拉山谷的故事为重点,借鉴 "不止一个健康 "和 "定居者生态 "的概念,强调定居者殖民项目在该地区和其他地方造成的有害生态影响。具体而言,我讲述了 20 世纪 50 年代犹太复国主义为抵御疟疾和促进该地区农业发展而使胡拉湿地干涸的故事,以及 20 世纪 90 年代以色列为支持每年大规模的鸟类迁徙而重新淹没和恢复部分胡拉湿地的故事。2021 年冬,胡拉山谷爆发禽流感(H5N1),八千多只鹤死亡,该地区鸡舍中的一百多万只鸡不得不被宰杀。本文利用主要于 2022 年夏季开展的人种学田野调查,讨论了可以说促成和加剧禽流感爆发的历史和社会生态条件,主张在承认该地区殖民定居者遗产的基础上,采取一种 "超越单一健康 "的方法。
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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