The Reintroduction of Beavers to Scotland: Rewilding, Biopolitics, and the Affordance of Non-human Autonomy
Rewilding is a distinctive form of ecological restoration that has emerged quite publicly within environmental policy and conservation advocacy circles. One of the fundamental tenets of rewilding is its emphasis on non-human autonomy, yet empirical examples that examine non-human autonomy are curren...
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2020-01-01
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doaj-42cc82ea93f147feb8bcdd9798978b012020-11-25T03:48:10ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsConservation & Society0972-49232020-01-0118210311310.4103/cs.cs_19_63The Reintroduction of Beavers to Scotland: Rewilding, Biopolitics, and the Affordance of Non-human AutonomyKim J WardJonathan PriorRewilding is a distinctive form of ecological restoration that has emerged quite publicly within environmental policy and conservation advocacy circles. One of the fundamental tenets of rewilding is its emphasis on non-human autonomy, yet empirical examples that examine non-human autonomy are currently limited. While there is a growing body of literature on the biopolitics of broader environmental conservation strategies, there is comparatively little scholarship on the biopolitics of rewilding. This paper argues that autonomy should not be used as a boundary marker to denote ‘wild’ non-humans, but as a situated condition that is variable across locations. It offers an empirical study of the biopolitics that govern the different expressions of non-human autonomy at two different locations in Scotland, where beavers have been reintroduced. The findings reveal how, depending on location and context, modes of governance related to rewilding strategies co-exist and interplay with animal autonomy and forms of power in contradictory ways.http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2020;volume=18;issue=2;spage=103;epage=113;aulast=Wardrewildingreintroductionbeaversbiopoliticsautonomymore-than-human agencyscotland |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kim J Ward Jonathan Prior |
spellingShingle |
Kim J Ward Jonathan Prior The Reintroduction of Beavers to Scotland: Rewilding, Biopolitics, and the Affordance of Non-human Autonomy Conservation & Society rewilding reintroduction beavers biopolitics autonomy more-than-human agency scotland |
author_facet |
Kim J Ward Jonathan Prior |
author_sort |
Kim J Ward |
title |
The Reintroduction of Beavers to Scotland: Rewilding, Biopolitics, and the Affordance of Non-human Autonomy |
title_short |
The Reintroduction of Beavers to Scotland: Rewilding, Biopolitics, and the Affordance of Non-human Autonomy |
title_full |
The Reintroduction of Beavers to Scotland: Rewilding, Biopolitics, and the Affordance of Non-human Autonomy |
title_fullStr |
The Reintroduction of Beavers to Scotland: Rewilding, Biopolitics, and the Affordance of Non-human Autonomy |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Reintroduction of Beavers to Scotland: Rewilding, Biopolitics, and the Affordance of Non-human Autonomy |
title_sort |
reintroduction of beavers to scotland: rewilding, biopolitics, and the affordance of non-human autonomy |
publisher |
Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications |
series |
Conservation & Society |
issn |
0972-4923 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
Rewilding is a distinctive form of ecological restoration that has emerged quite publicly within environmental policy and conservation advocacy circles. One of the fundamental tenets of rewilding is its emphasis on non-human autonomy, yet empirical examples that examine non-human autonomy are currently limited. While there is a growing body of literature on the biopolitics of broader environmental conservation strategies, there is comparatively little scholarship on the biopolitics of rewilding. This paper argues that autonomy should not be used as a boundary marker to denote ‘wild’ non-humans, but as a situated condition that is variable across locations. It offers an empirical study of the biopolitics that govern the different expressions of non-human autonomy at two different locations in Scotland, where beavers have been reintroduced. The findings reveal how, depending on location and context, modes of governance related to rewilding strategies co-exist and interplay with animal autonomy and forms of power in contradictory ways. |
topic |
rewilding reintroduction beavers biopolitics autonomy more-than-human agency scotland |
url |
http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2020;volume=18;issue=2;spage=103;epage=113;aulast=Ward |
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