* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Biopower in wildlife conservation More-than
Conservation agriculture wikipedia , lookup
Biodiversity action plan wikipedia , lookup
Molecular ecology wikipedia , lookup
Ecogovernmentality wikipedia , lookup
Conservation biology wikipedia , lookup
Operation Wallacea wikipedia , lookup
Sustainability metrics and indices wikipedia , lookup
Marine conservation wikipedia , lookup
Conservation psychology wikipedia , lookup
The sustainability episteme & conservation biopolitics [email protected] More-than-human social change in the Anthropocene Olive Ridley turtles in Odisha Michel Foucault: epistemes and biopowwer Wildlife conservation: concepts and practices of care Olive Ridleys https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZGVQ3AeoGo; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZGVQ3AeoGo Olive Ridleys in Odisha, India Threats and Protections Incidental mortality Habitat disruption, artificial light • Indian Wildlife Protection Act • Gahirmatha Marine Sanctuary • Orissa Marine Fisheries Regulation Act and Rules • IUCN – Dhamra port mitigation programme • Local and national conservation groups Conflicts • Fishing income, harassment, even suicides in the fishing community: “there are vested foreign interests at play” (fishing union leader) • Greenpeace’s anti-port campaign: conservationists as antidevelopment blacklisting of Greenpeace by Odisha Assembly IUCN-Dhamra port mitigation programme (deflectors, ‘turtle-friendly’ lighting) Regularities… • “It is not important to have a sanctuary, but it is important to protect turtles” (Fishing union leader) • “Something serious should be done to prevent it [turtle mortality]” (Port company official) Regularities… • “economic growth and infrastructure can go hand in hand with protection of the environment” (Greenpeace) • “conservation projects have to include human livelihood programmes” (conservationist) • “safeguarding both biological diversity and the needs of people” (IUCN) Win-win conservation underpinned by two sets of normative objectives: human-oriented and animal-oriented Episteme • Michel Foucault: regularities within and across academic disciplines • Episteme: that which ‘makes it possible to grasp the set of constraints and limitations which, at a given moment, are imposed on discourse’ (Foucault 2002) Sustainability episteme • Regularities in turtle debates: a) local livelihoods and regional economic development must be safeguarded. b) the Olive Ridley species must be protected. The sustainability episteme “we need to find a delicate balance between environment and development” (Forest department official) Norms in the sustainability episteme Assumptions/values that operate at a scale that is more-than-individual • Species extinction is a ‘bad’ • Reduction of income is a ‘bad’ • Economic development is a ‘good’ Epistemic norms > conservation biopolitics Biopower A mode of power “bent on generating forces, making them grow, ordering them” (Foucault 2008: 136) - Population, collectives - Entanglement of harm and care Population • “It isn’t about the life of an individual turtle or how it is treated” (environmentalist) • “there are numerous turtles…casualty numbers may be high, but rate might be low. 10-15,000 deaths might be nothing” (forest department official) • wildlife conservation is “concerned with populations and habitats” (Paquet and Darimont, 2010) The collective: species, population, ecosystem Entanglement of harm and care On behalf of the existence of everyone…in the name of life necessity” (Foucault 2008: 137) “a bandwidth of the acceptable” (Foucault 2009, 6): • “we should come up with an acceptable figure for turtle mortality” (Environmentalist) • Turtle take allowances • ‘Turtle-friendly’ lighting Flexible fishing regulations Not complete protection: 10,000 turtles die annually The sacrificial logic of population… Sustainable harvesting: to give the turtles “a stronger representation at the negotiating table” (Mrosovsky 2008: 14) Orissa “can sustain the exploitation of a few hundred or a few thousand adult turtles every year” (conservationist) Harm and care…tagging “where religion once demanded the sacrifice of bodies, knowledge now calls…us to the sacrifice of the subject of knowledge” (Foucault 1984: 96) Harm, curiosity, care… population census, turtle walks https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5k39Mynfus; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XySxEEo5uv0 Not specific to Odisha or Olive Ridleys Conservationists all over the world “rationalise suffering of individual animals as being necessary to achieve more important ecological goals of population or species preservation, or even their own research goals” (Paquet and Darimont, 2010, page 87). Biopower in conservation Why are these spaces of care infused with harm? Biopolitics and sustainability episteme Limits and possibilities of the sustainability episteme: conservation must not cause serious disrupt existing human ways of life in pursuit of turtle survival Win-win conservation and ontologies of the collective Population, ecosystem, biodiversity: trawling port development dredging harvesting ecotourism and turtle walks scientific research The sustainability episteme > the individual becomes invisible; the collective gains prominence An altruistic turtle? Take me, take my body, take my eggs…I want to help gather enough human support for survival. “species as an entity does not answer to selection” (Mayr, 1997, page 2092). Population, species, ecosystems are social constructs not morally neutral facts Biopower and the tensions of social change The Anthropocene: more-than-human activisms intersect with tradition, history The sustainability episteme: human and animal – oriented normative objectives Ontologies of the collective resolve these tensions and enable win-win solutions