Calls to rethink our ethical and political responsibilities with nonhuman others abound recent work in cultural geography. Such work unpacks the more-than-human agencies reshaping and rematerialising our bodies and subjective knowledges. This article uncovers the coproduction of human knowledges and urban spaces by examining the problematic migration of the Australian White Ibis into Australian urban localities. We put forth a storied approach to human-ibis relations, capturing the multiple and situated experiences materialising our urban relations with the species. Drawing on ibis ethology, media narratives, personal and interviewee stories, we explore how ibis take part in the co-constitution of urban spaces and identities. In particular,...
The city is increasingly recognised as a complex more-than-human space where the lives of humans and...
Environmental debates about which plant and animal species ‘belong’ in particular locations have a g...
How are preferences for “native” and “introduced” species of plants and animals given expression in ...
Calls to rethink our ethical and political responsibilities with nonhuman others abound recent work ...
The Australian White Ibis (Ibis) (Threskiornis molucca) is one of three endemic Ibis species in Aust...
The Australian White Ibis (Ibis) ( Threskiornis molucca) is one of three endemic Ibis species in Au...
From the early 1970s, driven by drought and degradation of interior wetlands, the Australian White I...
Over the past decade, environmental science and governance have undergone a ‘big data’ and ‘smart te...
At a time when seabird populations have experienced steep declines and the movement of diverse speci...
This article focuses on human-plant relations, drawing on ethnographic research from northern Austra...
A growing body of literature is concerned with ‘healing’ our cities, fostering an ethic of care for ...
The clear separation - conceptual, ethical, spatial - between man and wildlife (Whatmore, 2002) rema...
In the context of rapid urbanisation, geographers are calling for embracing non-humans as urban co-i...
Urbanisation is a major global trend that presents a novel environment for wildlife to colonise. Thi...
Under conditions of rapid urbanization humans and non-humans are pushed together and a question of h...
The city is increasingly recognised as a complex more-than-human space where the lives of humans and...
Environmental debates about which plant and animal species ‘belong’ in particular locations have a g...
How are preferences for “native” and “introduced” species of plants and animals given expression in ...
Calls to rethink our ethical and political responsibilities with nonhuman others abound recent work ...
The Australian White Ibis (Ibis) (Threskiornis molucca) is one of three endemic Ibis species in Aust...
The Australian White Ibis (Ibis) ( Threskiornis molucca) is one of three endemic Ibis species in Au...
From the early 1970s, driven by drought and degradation of interior wetlands, the Australian White I...
Over the past decade, environmental science and governance have undergone a ‘big data’ and ‘smart te...
At a time when seabird populations have experienced steep declines and the movement of diverse speci...
This article focuses on human-plant relations, drawing on ethnographic research from northern Austra...
A growing body of literature is concerned with ‘healing’ our cities, fostering an ethic of care for ...
The clear separation - conceptual, ethical, spatial - between man and wildlife (Whatmore, 2002) rema...
In the context of rapid urbanisation, geographers are calling for embracing non-humans as urban co-i...
Urbanisation is a major global trend that presents a novel environment for wildlife to colonise. Thi...
Under conditions of rapid urbanization humans and non-humans are pushed together and a question of h...
The city is increasingly recognised as a complex more-than-human space where the lives of humans and...
Environmental debates about which plant and animal species ‘belong’ in particular locations have a g...
How are preferences for “native” and “introduced” species of plants and animals given expression in ...