The "ontological turn" in anthropology is linked to the insight that environmental thinking requires reflecting on conflicting ways of "being and becoming in the world". This article explores how large-scale industrial farmers engage with the world, their ontic relationship with seeds, their direct reconnection to reality and sensorial perception of the non-human. However, seeds not only become what they are in multifarious networks of natural, cultural and political agencies, but their emergence and co-evolution with humans is ruptured through deregistration, persecution, confiscation and destruction. Proprietary industrial seed varieties carry instrumental rationality and control into the fields of Canadian farmers that are hard to resist...
This article investigates the multiple ontological politics of agriculture on Indian tea plantations...
This article recasts the debates over access to, and control over, genetic and biological knowledge ...
In Western culture, human beings have long sought to separate themselves from “nature,” but that att...
International audienceThis article follows the trajectory of a French farmers' movement that contest...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 1998 Dr. Malcolm J. IvesThrough agriculture, humans have ...
This thesis links three interconnected stories relevant to humanity's future: 1. Exposition of a dif...
Since the 1960s, there has been a marked dissent against conventional forms of agriculture in certai...
A single seed is more than just the promise of a plant. In rural south India, seeds represent diverg...
Special issue: Fields and Forest. Ethnographic Perspectives on Environmental Globalization, Münster ...
Demography has driven increases in agricultural productivity and is in the limelight once again with...
This qualitative research explores agri-food issues in contemporary, conventional hybrid seed produc...
Firstly, this thesis aims to highlight a form of alternative agriculture through an anthropological ...
This dissertation examines seed conflicts in Colombia due to the expansion of the Corporate Seed Reg...
The thesis discusses wildness within the context of agriculture. Wildness can be characterized as au...
Nature’s living ecosystems, which sustain all of us, are unravelling, and the world is changing at a...
This article investigates the multiple ontological politics of agriculture on Indian tea plantations...
This article recasts the debates over access to, and control over, genetic and biological knowledge ...
In Western culture, human beings have long sought to separate themselves from “nature,” but that att...
International audienceThis article follows the trajectory of a French farmers' movement that contest...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 1998 Dr. Malcolm J. IvesThrough agriculture, humans have ...
This thesis links three interconnected stories relevant to humanity's future: 1. Exposition of a dif...
Since the 1960s, there has been a marked dissent against conventional forms of agriculture in certai...
A single seed is more than just the promise of a plant. In rural south India, seeds represent diverg...
Special issue: Fields and Forest. Ethnographic Perspectives on Environmental Globalization, Münster ...
Demography has driven increases in agricultural productivity and is in the limelight once again with...
This qualitative research explores agri-food issues in contemporary, conventional hybrid seed produc...
Firstly, this thesis aims to highlight a form of alternative agriculture through an anthropological ...
This dissertation examines seed conflicts in Colombia due to the expansion of the Corporate Seed Reg...
The thesis discusses wildness within the context of agriculture. Wildness can be characterized as au...
Nature’s living ecosystems, which sustain all of us, are unravelling, and the world is changing at a...
This article investigates the multiple ontological politics of agriculture on Indian tea plantations...
This article recasts the debates over access to, and control over, genetic and biological knowledge ...
In Western culture, human beings have long sought to separate themselves from “nature,” but that att...