Numerous attempts have been made to understand the Anthropocene in relation to overwhelming species and habitat loss. However, amidst these losses ecological niches have emerged and been taken as signs of resilience and hope: from mushrooms that flourish in damaged forests to urban wildlife in brownfield sites. This article offers an alternative conception of abundance, which addresses the sociological and conceptual challenges posed when abundance is a characteristic of so-called pests, parasites and pathogens. The article draws together research from three case studies: bed bugs, hookworms and antibiotic resistant microbes, all of which have become intimately entangled with particular human communities as other lifeforms have declined. Th...
Drawing on the work of Albert Camus this paper offers a critique of certain discourses around ‘novel...
Garrett Hardin's tragedy of the commons is an analogy that shows how individuals driven by self-inte...
We live at a crossroads in the history of our species – and of planetary life. What comes next is un...
Numerous attempts have been made to understand the Anthropocene in relation to overwhelming species ...
Planetary changes associated with the Anthropocene challenge longestablished ideas and approaches wi...
Recent ‘Anthropocene’ commentaries have argued that as humans have become decisively entangled in na...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to articulate a meaningful response to recent calls to “indig...
In responding to the spatiotemporally specific geographies of extinction charted in the articles in ...
Throughout the 20th century, several thinkers noticed that Technology was becoming a global phenomen...
Biodiversity preservation is often viewed in utilitarian terms that render nonhuman species as ec...
On the western edge of the former brown coal mines in Søby, an area in central Jutland in Denmark th...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Environmental humanists rightly believe they have valuable contributions to make to rethinking and r...
The era we now live in is termed the Anthropocene. Climate change, land use change, pesticide and in...
This thesis is in two parts, a book of literary essays titled Abundance: Nature in Recovery (80%) ex...
Drawing on the work of Albert Camus this paper offers a critique of certain discourses around ‘novel...
Garrett Hardin's tragedy of the commons is an analogy that shows how individuals driven by self-inte...
We live at a crossroads in the history of our species – and of planetary life. What comes next is un...
Numerous attempts have been made to understand the Anthropocene in relation to overwhelming species ...
Planetary changes associated with the Anthropocene challenge longestablished ideas and approaches wi...
Recent ‘Anthropocene’ commentaries have argued that as humans have become decisively entangled in na...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to articulate a meaningful response to recent calls to “indig...
In responding to the spatiotemporally specific geographies of extinction charted in the articles in ...
Throughout the 20th century, several thinkers noticed that Technology was becoming a global phenomen...
Biodiversity preservation is often viewed in utilitarian terms that render nonhuman species as ec...
On the western edge of the former brown coal mines in Søby, an area in central Jutland in Denmark th...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Environmental humanists rightly believe they have valuable contributions to make to rethinking and r...
The era we now live in is termed the Anthropocene. Climate change, land use change, pesticide and in...
This thesis is in two parts, a book of literary essays titled Abundance: Nature in Recovery (80%) ex...
Drawing on the work of Albert Camus this paper offers a critique of certain discourses around ‘novel...
Garrett Hardin's tragedy of the commons is an analogy that shows how individuals driven by self-inte...
We live at a crossroads in the history of our species – and of planetary life. What comes next is un...