Environment, Culture and Political Ecology

This cluster of interests takes the social and political dimensions
of environmental use as its point of departure. The range of issues addressed in
our work includes the intersection between scientific and traditional knowledge
in natural resource management, sustainability in rural and urban settings, the
community-nature interface in primate conservation, the production and
consumption of global commodities, and the political ecology of resource
frontiers.
Faculty working in this area of research specialization include:
A. Kim Clark - A wide-ranging research project on public health and state formation in Ecuador (1900-1950) includes consideration of disease ecologies. One example of this research focus is the constellation of environmental, social and political-economic conditions that contributed to bubonic plague epidemics in Ecuador, and analysis of the cultural and political dimensions of plague eradication campaigns among subordinate groups.
Ian Colquhoun - Over the last decade, primatologists have focussed more and more attention on the conservation of nonhuman primate populations. An essential area of research in this regard, and one seeing much recent research activity, is ethnoprimatology -- the study of the interactions between humans and nonhuman primate populations. My interest in ethnoprimatology draws on my broader interests in comparative primate socioecology, my research experience in northwestern Madagascar, and my role as scientific advisor to the Black Lemur SSP (Species Survival Plan).
- Primates in the Forest: Sakalava Ethnoprimatology and Synecological Relations with Black Lemurs at Ambato Massif, Madagascar. In: Commensalism and Conflict: The human-primate interface, James D. Paterson and Janette Wallis, eds. Special Topics in Primatology, Series Editor, J. Wallis. Norman, Oklahoma: American Society of Primatologists. 2005.
- Black lemur (Eulemur macaco macaco -- Linnaeus, 1766), and Sclater's lemur (Eulemur macaco flavifrons -- Gray, 1867). In: Living Primates, Noel Rowe, ed. East Hampton, New York: Pogonias Press. (Submitted).
Dan Jorgensen - Much of my research has been devoted to understanding the impact of large-scale mining on rural people in Papua New Guinea. More recently, I have turned to three themes that grow out of this work: how government ideas about mining and customary land ownership provide contexts for configuring identities; the significance of mining in imaginary geographies at different scales; and the ways that impending mine closures figure in planners’ and local people’s views of the future.
- Whose nature? Invading bush spirits, travelling ancestors and mining in Telefolmin. Social Analysis 42(3):100-16. 1998
- Who and what is a landowner? Mythology and marking the ground in a Papua New Guinea mining project. In: Mining and Indigenous Lifeworlds in Australia and Papua New Guinea, A. Rumsey and J. Weiner, eds., pp. 68-100. Adelaide: Crawford House Publishing. 2002
- Hinterland history: the Ok Tedi mine and its cultural consequences in
Telefolmin. The Contemporary Pacific 18(2):233-263. 2006 - Clan-finding and clan-making: legibility and the politics of identity in a Papua New Guinea mining project. In: Customary Land Tenure and Registration in Indigenous Australia and Papua New Guinea, James Weiner and Katie Glaskin, eds., pp. 57-72. Canberra: Asia-Pacific Environment Monographs, ANU E-Press. 2007 [ Available electronically HERE ]
Karen Pennesi - My work examines language use at
multiple levels. The focus of my research is the mediating function of language
in human relationships with nature. Currently, I am investigating the role
climate forecasts play in rural communities of Ceará, Northeast Brazil.
Traditional predictions have been made for generations by local "rain prophets"
who make detailed observations of relationships in the ecosystem. My research
exposes the struggle between science and indigenous knowledge for control over
meaning that is crucial in establishing an authoritative position as 'weather
expert'. I integrate theoretical dimensions of linguistic and ecological
anthropology in analyses of how different evaluations of meteorologists' and
rain prophets' communicative practices are tied to particular historical,
social, environmental and epistemological contexts. An ethnographic and
discourse-based perspective gets to the heart of communication issues emerging
in these domains where science, cultural knowledge and subjective experience
intersect. My current research is also theoretically linked to other projects on
communication between science and the public, cultural aspects of natural
resource management, vulnerability of rural populations to climate-related
hazards, and environmental equity issues involving First Nations communities.
- Improving Forecast Communication: Linguistic and Cultural Considerations. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 88 (7):1033-1044. 2007
- Aspectos Lingüísticos nas Previsões de Chuva: FUNCEME e os Profetas da Chuva” (Linguistic Aspects of Rain Predictions: FUNCEME and the Rain Prophets). In Profetas da Chuva. Karla Patrícia Holanda Martins, (ed.). Fortaleza: Tempo d’Imagem. Pp. 144-155. 2006
Adriana Premat - My research broadly focuses on the environment, agriculture, and food consumption as these intersect with issues of poverty and sustainability in urban Latin America. Specifically, my fieldwork research has centered on the urban agriculture movements that arose in Cuba and Argentina over the last decade in the context of economic restructuring, political instability, widespread food insecurity, rapid urbanization, and environmental degradation. Among other things, my work examines the extent to which different forms of macro-economic and political organization, and the particular set of rights and entitlements they imply, affect the way marginal populations practice and “imagine” urban agriculture.
- Small-scale urban agriculture in Havana and the reproduction of the 'New Man' in contemporary Cuba. European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 75:85-99. 2003
- Moving between the map and the ground: shifting perspectives on urban agriculture in Havana, Cuba. In: Agropolis: The Social, Political and Environmental Dimensions of Urban Agriculture, Luc A. Mougeot, ed. Ottawa: Earthscan/IDRC. 2005
Andrew Walsh - My current research focuses on the parallel rise and divergent fates of northern Madagascar's sapphire and ecotourist trades, and on the people they involve. Through research with Malagasy people living in a once booming but now declining small-scale sapphire mining community, I have been investigating the unique consumption patterns, worldviews and ecological and ethical dilemmas that make this place what it is. Through research with people living around a nearby protected conservation area, I have been investigating the developments and speculations inspired by the region's growing ecotourist trade.
- In the Wake of Things: Speculating in and about Sapphires in Northern Madagascar. American Anthropologist, 106(2):225-237. 2004
- The Obvious Aspects of Ecological Underprivilege in Ankarana, Northern Madagascar. American Anthropologist, 107(4):654-665. 2005
- ‘Nobody Has a Money Taboo’: Situating Ethics in a Northern Malagasy Sapphire Mining Town. Anthropology Today, 22(4):4-8. 2006
Christine White - Isotopic anthropology is based on the premise that we are biological reflections of our physical environments. Therefore our bodies are proxies for both short and long term environmental change. Human tissues are planned for use in reconstructing short-term change caused by El Niños in Peru and their relationship to political and economic upheaval (with Andrew Nelson), and long term change in Mexico (hypothesized to have caused the fall of the Tarascan civilization [with colleagues in Mexico and the US]), and the Dahkleh Oasis, Egypt (hypothesized to have been integral to a number of cultural and political dynamics).
Also from this web page:
Other Core Research Areas
Bioarchaeology and Archaeological Sciences
Borders, Identities and Mobility
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