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Anthropology of Conservation & Global Environmentalisms
Cursusdoel
After completing this course students are able to:
• identify key anthropological approaches to human-environment relations (assessed via 1, 2, 3 and 4 below)
• describe the genealogy of conservation and environment discourse, as well as corresponding forms of conservation and development practice (assessed via 1, 2 and 4 evaluations below)
• appreciate the cultural politics that fundamentally mediate global environmentalisms, conflict, and environmental justice (assessed via 1, 2, 3 and 4 below)
• identify prominent case studies of environmental disjuncture and conflict across the globe (assessed via 3 and 4 below)
• demonstrate skills and competencies pertaining to critical analysis, lateral thinking, and self-reflexivity (assessed via 1, 2, 3 and 4 below)
• demonstrate oral and written communication skills, including public speaking and report writing (assessed via 1, 2, 3 and 4 below)
• demonstrate research skills, including the case study methodology (assessed via 3 and 4 below)
• reflect on personal agency and sense of responsibility vis à vis today’s environmental crises (assessed via 1 below)
• identify key anthropological approaches to human-environment relations (assessed via 1, 2, 3 and 4 below)
• describe the genealogy of conservation and environment discourse, as well as corresponding forms of conservation and development practice (assessed via 1, 2 and 4 evaluations below)
• appreciate the cultural politics that fundamentally mediate global environmentalisms, conflict, and environmental justice (assessed via 1, 2, 3 and 4 below)
• identify prominent case studies of environmental disjuncture and conflict across the globe (assessed via 3 and 4 below)
• demonstrate skills and competencies pertaining to critical analysis, lateral thinking, and self-reflexivity (assessed via 1, 2, 3 and 4 below)
• demonstrate oral and written communication skills, including public speaking and report writing (assessed via 1, 2, 3 and 4 below)
• demonstrate research skills, including the case study methodology (assessed via 3 and 4 below)
• reflect on personal agency and sense of responsibility vis à vis today’s environmental crises (assessed via 1 below)
Vakinhoudelijk
The global environmental movement and its corollary initiatives of conservation are having dramatic effects on people and places throughout the world. It is amounting to powerful environmentalisms that are invoking a host of discursive and material contestations, ultimately transforming human-environment relations. We are in an environmental epoch, or the “Anthropocene”, as many have begun to call it. It is a period characterized, in part, by conservation complexes that are reframing how we conceptualize ‘nature’, transforming its use and governance, reconfiguring landscapes, and reconstituting identities in the process. Put another way, a whole new form of “eco-governmentality” (Goldman, 2001) has erupted across the world, introducing new technologies of government and self. In most recent forms, ‘selling nature to save it’ (McAfee, 1999) type logics inform ‘neoliberal conservation’ (Igoe and Brockington, 2007) and, likewise, ‘NatureTM Inc.’ initiatives (Büscher et al., 2014). Concomitant to all this, various ‘frictions’ (Tsing, 2005) are emerging as local communities engage with, contest, and appropriate new global flows of capital, ideas, and modes of rule.
This class introduces students to anthropological approaches to the environment and environmentalism, including cultural ecology, political ecology, environmental history, science studies, poststructuralist cultural studies, and environmental justice. Using such frameworks, we will explore the genealogy of conservation, the history of environment and sustainability discourse, and most importantly, the power and politics that animate contemporary opportunities and pitfalls in the field of environmental conservation. Borrowing Donald Moore’s (2005) concept, “Suffering for Territory”, the class will especially focus on how communities are navigating, resisting, and articulating these global projects. The course will include examples from various global contexts, with a special emphasis on Africa.
This class introduces students to anthropological approaches to the environment and environmentalism, including cultural ecology, political ecology, environmental history, science studies, poststructuralist cultural studies, and environmental justice. Using such frameworks, we will explore the genealogy of conservation, the history of environment and sustainability discourse, and most importantly, the power and politics that animate contemporary opportunities and pitfalls in the field of environmental conservation. Borrowing Donald Moore’s (2005) concept, “Suffering for Territory”, the class will especially focus on how communities are navigating, resisting, and articulating these global projects. The course will include examples from various global contexts, with a special emphasis on Africa.
Format
The course is designed in seminar format, with an emphasis on student participation and class discussion. Each class will include brief lectures to introduce key themes from the class readings, with the remainder of the class dedicated to small and large-group discussions. It represents a rather intensive reading course wherein students are expected to effectively engage the designated class themes, coming prepared each class to share insights, criticism, and questions. The course will include various media review, lectures, guest presentations, and a field engagement with international conservation practitioners. One primary focus in the course is to provide a platform for students to identify, explore and articulate contemporary case studies of environmentalism and conflict. Accordingly, students are expected to identify, present and debate a chosen case study through a presentation and final research paper.
As a follow-up for this course, students can continue in Anthropology, Regional Development (UCSSCGEO32) or Post-colonial Interventions (UCHUMLIT36).
The course is designed in seminar format, with an emphasis on student participation and class discussion. Each class will include brief lectures to introduce key themes from the class readings, with the remainder of the class dedicated to small and large-group discussions. It represents a rather intensive reading course wherein students are expected to effectively engage the designated class themes, coming prepared each class to share insights, criticism, and questions. The course will include various media review, lectures, guest presentations, and a field engagement with international conservation practitioners. One primary focus in the course is to provide a platform for students to identify, explore and articulate contemporary case studies of environmentalism and conflict. Accordingly, students are expected to identify, present and debate a chosen case study through a presentation and final research paper.
As a follow-up for this course, students can continue in Anthropology, Regional Development (UCSSCGEO32) or Post-colonial Interventions (UCHUMLIT36).
Werkvormen
UCU SSC 2 course
Toetsing
Participation
Verplicht | Weging 10% | ECTS 0,75
Final research paper
Verplicht | Weging 35% | ECTS 2,63
Presentation
Verplicht | Weging 20% | ECTS 1,5
*midterm FEEDBACK*
Niet verplicht
Midterm Exam
Verplicht | Weging 35% | ECTS 2,63
Ingangseisen en voorkennis
Ingangseisen
Er moet voldaan zijn aan minimaal één van de cursussen:
- [UCSCIEAR11] Introduction to Earth and Environment
- [UCSCIPHY01] Energy Systems and Sustainability
- [UCSSCANT11] Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology
Voorkennis
Er is geen informatie over benodigde voorkennis bekend.
Voertalen
- Engels
Competenties
-
Academisch schrijven
-
Debatteren / discoursanalyse
-
Internationale en interculturele oriëntatie
-
Interdisciplinariteit
-
Kritisch lezen
-
Onderzoeksvaardigheden
-
Presenteren
-
Samenwerken
Cursusmomenten
Gerelateerde studies
Tentamens
Er is geen tentamenrooster beschikbaar voor deze cursus
Verplicht materiaal
Materiaal | Omschrijving |
---|---|
READER | Course Reader (workspace): a collection of relevant readings will be posted online |
BOEK | Haenn et al. 2016. The Environment in Anthropology. 2nd Edition* *please note that this book is available in electronic form via UU library |
Aanbevolen materiaal
Er is geen informatie over de aanbevolen literatuur bekend
Coördinator
V.C. Wright MA | v.c.wright@uu.nl |
Docenten
dr. C.H. Buscher | c.h.buscher@uu.nl |
Inschrijving
Let op: deze cursus is niet toegankelijk voor studenten van andere faculteiten, bijvakkers mogen zich dus niet inschrijven.
Naar OSIRIS-inschrijvingen
Permanente link naar de cursuspagina
Laat in de Cursus-Catalogus zien