Relinquishing Control: Conservation Oriented Toward Increased Indigenous Agency and Non-Human Autonomy in Invasive Species Management

1. Current invasive species management is problematic in its unclear/xenophobic terminology, insufficient in practice given the scale/cost/complexity of the issue, and colonial in its normative assumptions. In exploring the normative assumptions underpinning current settler invasive species conserva...

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Main Author: Scharff, Cameron
Other Authors: Whyte, Kyle, na, na
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/192879
https://doi.org/10.7302/22611
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spelling ftumdeepblue:oai:deepblue.lib.umich.edu:2027.42/192879 2024-05-19T07:28:37+00:00 Relinquishing Control: Conservation Oriented Toward Increased Indigenous Agency and Non-Human Autonomy in Invasive Species Management Scharff, Cameron Whyte, Kyle na, na 2024-04 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/192879 https://doi.org/10.7302/22611 en_US eng https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/192879 csharff https://dx.doi.org/10.7302/22611 non-human autonomy settler/indigenous cosmologies invasive species biocultural frameworks Practicum 2024 ftumdeepblue https://doi.org/10.7302/22611 2024-04-30T23:30:24Z 1. Current invasive species management is problematic in its unclear/xenophobic terminology, insufficient in practice given the scale/cost/complexity of the issue, and colonial in its normative assumptions. In exploring the normative assumptions underpinning current settler invasive species conservation, I mean to demonstrate how these practices maintain visions of the settler homeland and settler futures, with little consideration for indigenous cosmologies and futures. 2. Most settler agencies structure response to invasion as prevention ideally, eradication if possible, and long term management if necessary. This presents an underlying bias toward eradication of the “other” (be they human or non) that pervades settler colonial states, which is contrasted with indigenous relational cosmologies capable of more just diplomacy with plant “nations,” to borrow an Anishinaabe concept. 3. Building from this, I demonstrate the connection between cosmology, management, and land. For this purpose, I focus on biocultural frameworks, and utilize this framework to argue for how increased “biocultural diversity” is not only an issue of justice in what cultures are reified in the landscape, but also important for the improved conservation that can result from increased biocultural diversity. 4. Most importantly, the largest issue with invasive species management is the failure to adequately respect and collaborate with indigenous peoples. Such collaborations provide potential for increased indigenous agency and self-determination in management practices; justice in contributing to indigenous governance resurgence; and justice for people/non-humans in that it can diversify the cultural landscape. 5. Settlers have much to learn from indigenous management practices/understandings of invasive species. Particularly helpful are concepts of indigenous relationships with non-humans, which show greater respect for non-human autonomy and can thereby lead to invasive species practices not oriented toward eradication as ideal. 6. ... Other/Unknown Material anishina* University of Michigan: Deep Blue
institution Open Polar
collection University of Michigan: Deep Blue
op_collection_id ftumdeepblue
language English
topic non-human autonomy
settler/indigenous cosmologies
invasive species
biocultural frameworks
spellingShingle non-human autonomy
settler/indigenous cosmologies
invasive species
biocultural frameworks
Scharff, Cameron
Relinquishing Control: Conservation Oriented Toward Increased Indigenous Agency and Non-Human Autonomy in Invasive Species Management
topic_facet non-human autonomy
settler/indigenous cosmologies
invasive species
biocultural frameworks
description 1. Current invasive species management is problematic in its unclear/xenophobic terminology, insufficient in practice given the scale/cost/complexity of the issue, and colonial in its normative assumptions. In exploring the normative assumptions underpinning current settler invasive species conservation, I mean to demonstrate how these practices maintain visions of the settler homeland and settler futures, with little consideration for indigenous cosmologies and futures. 2. Most settler agencies structure response to invasion as prevention ideally, eradication if possible, and long term management if necessary. This presents an underlying bias toward eradication of the “other” (be they human or non) that pervades settler colonial states, which is contrasted with indigenous relational cosmologies capable of more just diplomacy with plant “nations,” to borrow an Anishinaabe concept. 3. Building from this, I demonstrate the connection between cosmology, management, and land. For this purpose, I focus on biocultural frameworks, and utilize this framework to argue for how increased “biocultural diversity” is not only an issue of justice in what cultures are reified in the landscape, but also important for the improved conservation that can result from increased biocultural diversity. 4. Most importantly, the largest issue with invasive species management is the failure to adequately respect and collaborate with indigenous peoples. Such collaborations provide potential for increased indigenous agency and self-determination in management practices; justice in contributing to indigenous governance resurgence; and justice for people/non-humans in that it can diversify the cultural landscape. 5. Settlers have much to learn from indigenous management practices/understandings of invasive species. Particularly helpful are concepts of indigenous relationships with non-humans, which show greater respect for non-human autonomy and can thereby lead to invasive species practices not oriented toward eradication as ideal. 6. ...
author2 Whyte, Kyle
na, na
format Other/Unknown Material
author Scharff, Cameron
author_facet Scharff, Cameron
author_sort Scharff, Cameron
title Relinquishing Control: Conservation Oriented Toward Increased Indigenous Agency and Non-Human Autonomy in Invasive Species Management
title_short Relinquishing Control: Conservation Oriented Toward Increased Indigenous Agency and Non-Human Autonomy in Invasive Species Management
title_full Relinquishing Control: Conservation Oriented Toward Increased Indigenous Agency and Non-Human Autonomy in Invasive Species Management
title_fullStr Relinquishing Control: Conservation Oriented Toward Increased Indigenous Agency and Non-Human Autonomy in Invasive Species Management
title_full_unstemmed Relinquishing Control: Conservation Oriented Toward Increased Indigenous Agency and Non-Human Autonomy in Invasive Species Management
title_sort relinquishing control: conservation oriented toward increased indigenous agency and non-human autonomy in invasive species management
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/192879
https://doi.org/10.7302/22611
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/192879
csharff
https://dx.doi.org/10.7302/22611
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7302/22611
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