在南部非洲开展多物种研究:历史遗产、边缘化主体、反思性立场。

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology Southern Africa Pub Date : 2024-08-08 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1080/23323256.2024.2314786
Paula Alexiou, Julia Brekl, Emilie Köhler, Wisse van Engelen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

多物种研究以解决人类例外论而闻名。虽然该领域在人文和社会科学学者中的受欢迎程度显著提高,但批评者认为,它忽视了人类之间以及人类与其他非人类之间的不平等和由此产生的差异。这些批评意见与南部非洲的情况尤为相关,在该地区,人类之间的极端不平等现象依然存在,而野生动物却往往被认为在该地区著名的保护行业中享有有利地位。作为在以南部非洲卡万戈-赞比西河跨界保护区为重点的多物种研究项目中工作的四名研究人员,我们提出了一个问题:政治化的多物种研究可能是什么样的?在本文中,我们将分享在这一复杂的政治环境中工作时的想法和反思。我们从自己的领域中汲取灵感,分享了在实地工作中遇到的一些持续关注的问题,并借鉴处理类似问题的多物种文献,对这些问题进行了讨论和背景分析。我们确定了三个突出主题,这些主题应为后殖民地保护景观中的多物种工作提供信息并使其政治化:历史遗产、反思性立场和边缘化主体。
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Performing multispecies studies in Southern Africa: historical legacies, marginalised subjects, reflexive positionalities.

Multispecies studies are known for tackling human exceptionalism. Whilst the field has seen a remarkable increase in popularity amongst scholars in the humanities and social sciences, critiques argue that it neglects inequalities and consequential differences amongst humans and between humans and other-than-humans. These critiques are especially relevant in the context of Southern Africa, where extreme inequalities amongst humans persist whilst wildlife is often perceived to enjoy a favoured position in the region's prominent conservation industries. As four researchers working in a multispecies study project focusing on the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area in Southern Africa, we pose the question of what a politicised multispecies studies might look like. In this article, we share our thoughts and reflections on working in this complex political landscape. Using insights from our own fields, we share some of the persistent concerns encountered during fieldwork and discuss and contextualise these by drawing on multispecies literature that deals with similar concerns. We identify three salient themes that should inform and politicise multispecies work in postcolonial conservation landscapes: historical legacies, reflexive positionalities and marginalised subjects.

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期刊最新文献
Introduction: Multispecies encounters in conservation landscapes in Southern Africa. Killing tsetse and/or saving wildlife? A multispecies assemblage in colonial Zambia (1895-1959). Performing multispecies studies in Southern Africa: historical legacies, marginalised subjects, reflexive positionalities. Wildlife corridors in a Southern African conservation landscape: the political ecology of multispecies mobilities along the arteries of anthropogenic conservation. Anthropology Southern Africa statement on Israeli state violence in Gaza
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