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9781412910484

Geographies of Nature : Societies, Environments, Ecologies

by
  • ISBN13:

    9781412910484

  • ISBN10:

    141291048X

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2007-10-17
  • Publisher: SAGE Publications Ltd

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Summary

Geographies of Nature introduces readers to conventional understandings of nature, while examining alternative accounts ' from different disciplines - where nature resists easy classification.Accessibly written, organized in 10 chapters in two sections,  Geographies of Nature demonstrates how recent thinking has urgent relevance and impact on the ways in which we approach environmental problems. The text:makes concepts accessible and applicable to readers' own experience with the extensive use of case studies uses text boxes to introduce readers to debates and ideas in ways that make them more easily understood grounds the reader and proceeds to the explanation of more complex arguments progressivelyGeographies of Nature presents a new kind of environmental analysis, one that refuses to view nature as wholly separate to the human and nonhuman practices through which it is made and remade.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgementsp. viii
List of Figuresp. x
Introductionp. 1
What are Geographies of Nature?p. 5
Nature's realityp. 7
Introductionp. 7
Nature out therep. 10
Two species of naturep. 14
Conclusionp. 22
Background readingp. 22
Further readingp. 22
The thought of Naturep. 23
Evolution as competitive individualismp. 24
Darwin, evolution and its impactsp. 28
Conclusion: from dependency to co-productionp. 33
Background readingp. 34
Further readingp. 34
Towards the co-production of nature and societyp. 35
Divisions - their causes and consequencesp. 36
Scrapie: a sociable historyp. 37
Conclusionp. 45
Background readingp. 46
Further readingp. 46
Hybrid naturesp. 47
Interactionsp. 47
Hybridsp. 50
A more than human phenomenology?p. 57
Conclusionp. 59
Background readingp. 60
Further readingp. 60
Geographies of nature and differencep. 61
Degrees and differencesp. 62
Nature's geographyp. 66
Involving geographies of naturep. 72
Conclusionp. 74
Background readingp. 75
Further readingp. 75
How and Why Geographies of Nature Matter?p. 77
First things? Nature and the sciencesp. 79
First things - conforming proteins in practicep. 80
Making policy without politics: sticking to non-stick factsp. 86
Ways of being openp. 94
The politics of thingsp. 97
Conclusionp. 99
Background readingp. 100
Further readingp. 101
Securing naturesp. 102
Introductionp. 102
Biosecurityp. 102
Foot and mouth diseasep. 107
Highly pathogenic avian influenzap. 112
Multiple networksp. 118
Conclusionp. 122
Background readingp. 123
Further readingp. 123
Conserving naturesp. 124
Conserving nature in theory and practicep. 124
Making things presentp. 127
Ethologies and representationp. 143
A careful conservationp. 145
Conclusionp. 147
Background readingp. 148
Further readingp. 148
Animals and environments - towards a caring environmentalismp. 150
Human animals - what kind of relation?p. 151
Translating the manifestop. 157
Conclusionp. 162
Background readingp. 163
Further readingp. 164
Environmental policies and sustainabilitiesp. 165
Making things concretep. 166
Modes of orderingp. 175
Ecologies of actionp. 181
Sustainability and multiplicityp. 185
Conclusionp. 187
Further readingp. 187
Afterword: Activating Geographies of Naturep. 188
No Nature, or politics without Naturep. 188
Many natures - doing politics as multinaturalismp. 190
Bibliographyp. 193
Indexp. 204
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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