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Conservation Politics: The Last Anti-Colonial Battle

Conservation Politics: The Last Anti-Colonial Battle

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David Johns
Cambridge University Press, 4/18/2019
EAN 9781316648933, ISBN10: 1316648931

Paperback, 398 pages, 22.6 x 15.2 x 2 cm
Language: English

Whilst the science of conservation biology is thriving as a discipline, ultimately global conservation is failing. Why, when the majority of people say they value nature and its protection? David Johns argues that the loss of species and healthy ecosystems is best understood as human imposition of a colonial relationship on the non-human world - one of exploitation and domination. Global institutions benefit from transforming nature into commodities, and conservation is a low priority. This book places political issues at the forefront, and tackles critical questions of conservation efficacy. It considers the role of effective influence on decision making, key policy changes to reduce human footprint, and the centrality of culture in mobilising support. It draws on political lessons from successful social movements, including human anti-colonial struggles, to provide conservation biologists and practitioners in scientific and social science disciplines and NGOs with the tools and wider context to accelerate their work's impact.

Introduction
Part I. The Problem
1. The tragedy of political failure
2. Like it or not, politics is the solution
Part II. Getting the Questions Right
3. Ten questions for conservation politics
4. Adapting society to the wild
5. Striking at the roots
6. Domination and the intractability of energy problems
Part III. Taking the Offensive
7. Turning the tide
8. Lessons from large scale conservation
9. Doing large-scale restoration
10. The other connectivity
11. The special challenge of marine conservation
12. The biological sciences and conservation
Part IV. Culture Change
13. Conservation, George Orwell and language
14. Restoring story and myth
15. Conservation's moral imperative
Conclusion.