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☐ ☆ ✇ Edge Effects

Saving the Forest to Secure the Mine in Jamaica’s Cockpit Country

By: Marie Widengård — June 15th 2023 at 13:00

Marie Widengård looks to critical border studies to understand how both extraction and conservation are at work in a contested area of Jamaica.

The post Saving the Forest to Secure the Mine in Jamaica’s Cockpit Country appeared first on Edge Effects.

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Multispecies Grief in the Wake of Megafires

By: Nathaniel Otjen — June 1st 2023 at 15:00

A global coalition of authors articulate the environmental violence of megafires by focusing on the myriad experiences of multispecies grief in their wake.

The post Multispecies Grief in the Wake of Megafires appeared first on Edge Effects.

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The Problem with Wind Farming on Rajasthan’s Sacred Lands

By: Kuhelika Ghosh — May 23rd 2023 at 12:49

Orans are sacred lands in the Thar Desert that are are being developed for wind energy projects. Nisha Paliwal argues that while wind energy is considered sustainable, it is experienced as violent extractivism by nearby village communities.

The post The Problem with Wind Farming on Rajasthan’s Sacred Lands appeared first on Edge Effects.

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Pandemics, Predation, and Crip Worldings

By: Mollie Holmberg — May 11th 2023 at 14:10

Mollie Holmberg takes crip lessons from philosopher Val Plumwood's experience of being prey to a crocodile, pointing toward strategies for collective pandemic survival and resistance to environmental violence.

The post Pandemics, Predation, and Crip Worldings appeared first on Edge Effects.

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Work, Play, and Elephants in South Florida’s Leisure Landscape

By: Anna Andrzejewski — April 27th 2023 at 14:30

Two elephants came to live in Miami Beach with resort guests in the 1920s, troubling the divides between humans and animals, work and play. Anna Vemer Andrzejewski examines the ambiguous role these elephants occupied in Florida's leisure landscape.

The post Work, Play, and Elephants in South Florida’s Leisure Landscape appeared first on Edge Effects.

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The Violence of Gated Communities in Buenos Aires’s Wetlands

By: Mara Dicenta — April 20th 2023 at 13:00

Real estate developments emulating U.S.-style master-planned communities are popular in Buenos Aires. Mara Dicenta unpacks the violence such developments enact on the environment and the community, as well as the resurgence against them.

The post The Violence of Gated Communities in Buenos Aires’s Wetlands appeared first on Edge Effects.

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Young, Queer Farmers Are Here to Change U.S. Agriculture

By: Eliza Pessereau — April 6th 2023 at 14:16

Today's queer youth are more interested in farming than ever. Eliza Pessereau surveyed members of the Queer Farmer Listserv to understand their challenges and motivations for going "back to the land."

The post Young, Queer Farmers Are Here to Change U.S. Agriculture appeared first on Edge Effects.

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The Transformative and Hungry Technologies of Copper Mining

By: Robrecht Declercq — March 16th 2023 at 13:12

Robrecht Declercq and Duncan Money, editors of the recent book Born With a Copper Spoon, explore the past and future relationship between mining technologies and the environment.

The post The Transformative and Hungry Technologies of Copper Mining appeared first on Edge Effects.

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Into the Not-So-Wild World of Pokémon

By: Nate Carlin — March 9th 2023 at 14:40

From adorable pets to exotic safaris, the Pokémon universe offers a sprawling jungle gym for players. Writer and gamer Nate Carlin gives a guided tour of what he calls the franchise's naive ecotopia.

The post Into the Not-So-Wild World of Pokémon appeared first on Edge Effects.

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The Boy and The Bird

By: Nancy J. Jacobs — March 2nd 2023 at 16:48

Nancy J. Jacobs explores the thought-provoking, tragic relationship between enslaved Africans and the African grey parrot in eighteenth century European portraiture.

The post The Boy and The Bird appeared first on Edge Effects.

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When Aboriginal Burning Practices Meet Colonial Legacies in Australia

By: Mardi Reardon-Smith — February 23rd 2023 at 14:50

Aboriginal burning regimes have become popular as a solution to prevent catastrophic wildfires in Australia. Mardi Reardon-Smith argues that Aboriginal peoples’ fire knowledge is not static and contemporary burning regimes result from colonial histories and the intercultural co-creation of environmental knowledges.

The post When Aboriginal Burning Practices Meet Colonial Legacies in Australia appeared first on Edge Effects.

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