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2. Debating the Science of Using Marine Turtles: Boundary Work among Species Experts
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Lisa M. Campbell
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction 1
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Part 1. Production of Environmental Knowledge: Scientists, Complex Natures, and the Question of Agency
- Introduction 25
- 1. Politicizing Environmental Explanations: What Can Political Ecology Learn from Sociology and Philosophy of Science? 31
- 2. Debating the Science of Using Marine Turtles: Boundary Work among Species Experts 47
- 3. Technobiological Imaginaries: How Do Systems Biologists Know Nature? 65
- 4. Agency, Structuredness, and the Production of Knowledge within Intersecting Processes 81
- 5. Fermentation, Rot, and Other Human- Microbial Performances 99
- 6. Ferricrete, Forests, and Temporal Scale in the Production of Colonial Science in Africa 113
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Part 2. Application of Environmental Knowledge: The Politics of Constructing Society/Nature
- Introduction 129
- 7. “We Don’t Harvest Animals; We Kill Them”: Agricultural Metaphors and the Politics of Wildlife Management in the Yukon 135
- 8. Political Violence and Scientific Forestry: Emergencies, Insurgencies, and Counterinsurgencies in Southeast Asia 152
- 9. Spatial- Geographic Models of Water Scarcity and Supply in Irrigation Engineering and Management: Bolivia, 1952–2009 167
- 10. The Politics of Connectivity across Human- Occupied Landscapes: Corridors near Nairobi National Park, Kenya 186
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Part 3. Circulation of Environmental Knowledge: Networks, Expertise, and Science in Practice
- Introduction 203
- 11. Rooted Networks, Webs of Relation, and the Power of Situated Science: Bringing the Models Back Down to Earth in Zambrana 209
- 12. Circulating Science, Incompletely Regulating Commodities: Governing from a Distance in Transnational Agro- Food Networks 227
- 13. Reclaiming the Technological Imagination: Water, Power, and Place in India 244
- 14. Circulating Knowledge, Constructing Expertise 263
- 15. Experiments as “Performances”: Interpreting Farmers’ Soil Fertility Management Practices in Western Kenya 280
- Conclusion 297
- References 305
- List of Contributors 343
- Index 345
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1. Production of Environmental Knowledge: Scientists, Complex Natures, and the Question of Agency
- Introduction 25
- 1. Politicizing Environmental Explanations: What Can Political Ecology Learn from Sociology and Philosophy of Science? 31
- 2. Debating the Science of Using Marine Turtles: Boundary Work among Species Experts 47
- 3. Technobiological Imaginaries: How Do Systems Biologists Know Nature? 65
- 4. Agency, Structuredness, and the Production of Knowledge within Intersecting Processes 81
- 5. Fermentation, Rot, and Other Human- Microbial Performances 99
- 6. Ferricrete, Forests, and Temporal Scale in the Production of Colonial Science in Africa 113
-
Part 2. Application of Environmental Knowledge: The Politics of Constructing Society/Nature
- Introduction 129
- 7. “We Don’t Harvest Animals; We Kill Them”: Agricultural Metaphors and the Politics of Wildlife Management in the Yukon 135
- 8. Political Violence and Scientific Forestry: Emergencies, Insurgencies, and Counterinsurgencies in Southeast Asia 152
- 9. Spatial- Geographic Models of Water Scarcity and Supply in Irrigation Engineering and Management: Bolivia, 1952–2009 167
- 10. The Politics of Connectivity across Human- Occupied Landscapes: Corridors near Nairobi National Park, Kenya 186
-
Part 3. Circulation of Environmental Knowledge: Networks, Expertise, and Science in Practice
- Introduction 203
- 11. Rooted Networks, Webs of Relation, and the Power of Situated Science: Bringing the Models Back Down to Earth in Zambrana 209
- 12. Circulating Science, Incompletely Regulating Commodities: Governing from a Distance in Transnational Agro- Food Networks 227
- 13. Reclaiming the Technological Imagination: Water, Power, and Place in India 244
- 14. Circulating Knowledge, Constructing Expertise 263
- 15. Experiments as “Performances”: Interpreting Farmers’ Soil Fertility Management Practices in Western Kenya 280
- Conclusion 297
- References 305
- List of Contributors 343
- Index 345