The 2019–2020 Australian bushfire disaster witnessed extraordinary wildlife death. A key component of the response was killing invasive life that might opportunistically colonise freshly burnt landscapes or prey on what survived. This paper considers the notion of disaster as opportunity in order to examine the ontological politics of governing invasive life. Our focus is twofold: the re-articulation of power over invasive life during disaster reproducing its abjection, and the colonial context in which invasive species management and disaster responses occur. We first consider how invasive life is rendered abject in governance through the application of the ‘invasion curve’ which preconditions opposition to invasive life, and through a mor...
Intensifying global dynamics of wildlife crime are rapidly reshaping conservation politics, practice...
Humans kill and care for animals in a multitude of contexts. These themes – killing and caring – for...
The 2019–2020 “Black Summer” bushfire season woke Australian and global populations to the harsh rea...
Australia’s 2019–2020 bushfires had a devastating impact on animals, humans, and ecosystems. They al...
The 2019–2020 megafires in Australia brought a tragic loss of human life and the most dramatic loss ...
The bushfires in Australia during the Summer of 2019–2020, in the midst of which we were writing thi...
This paper brings a material ecocritical perspective to the phenomenon of wildfire, with specific re...
Fire has long been a part of the Australian environment and remains a potent force in shaping the ad...
The management of fire within landscapes is a topic of increasing contestation. This is particularly...
The catastrophic 2019/2020 Black Summer bushfires were the worst fire season in the recorded history...
I discuss overflows of several introduced vertebrate species in Australia and critically explore the...
From September 2019 to February 2020 fires destroyed dwellings, towns and killed farm animals and wi...
Abstract Throughout the last thirty years bushfires or wildfires have increased globa...
Abstract. At a national policy level, Australian governments have embraced the notion of shared resp...
Understanding how increasing risk of frequent and severe fires affects biodiversity and ecosystem fu...
Intensifying global dynamics of wildlife crime are rapidly reshaping conservation politics, practice...
Humans kill and care for animals in a multitude of contexts. These themes – killing and caring – for...
The 2019–2020 “Black Summer” bushfire season woke Australian and global populations to the harsh rea...
Australia’s 2019–2020 bushfires had a devastating impact on animals, humans, and ecosystems. They al...
The 2019–2020 megafires in Australia brought a tragic loss of human life and the most dramatic loss ...
The bushfires in Australia during the Summer of 2019–2020, in the midst of which we were writing thi...
This paper brings a material ecocritical perspective to the phenomenon of wildfire, with specific re...
Fire has long been a part of the Australian environment and remains a potent force in shaping the ad...
The management of fire within landscapes is a topic of increasing contestation. This is particularly...
The catastrophic 2019/2020 Black Summer bushfires were the worst fire season in the recorded history...
I discuss overflows of several introduced vertebrate species in Australia and critically explore the...
From September 2019 to February 2020 fires destroyed dwellings, towns and killed farm animals and wi...
Abstract Throughout the last thirty years bushfires or wildfires have increased globa...
Abstract. At a national policy level, Australian governments have embraced the notion of shared resp...
Understanding how increasing risk of frequent and severe fires affects biodiversity and ecosystem fu...
Intensifying global dynamics of wildlife crime are rapidly reshaping conservation politics, practice...
Humans kill and care for animals in a multitude of contexts. These themes – killing and caring – for...
The 2019–2020 “Black Summer” bushfire season woke Australian and global populations to the harsh rea...