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University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Political Ecology Group meetings > From settler ecologies to ecologies otherwise? The possibilities and limitations of inclusive conservation in northern Kenya
![]() From settler ecologies to ecologies otherwise? The possibilities and limitations of inclusive conservation in northern KenyaAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Tom Fry. This talk focuses on an initiative in northern Kenya that aims to create space for conservation otherwise in a settler colonial stronghold dominated by private, fortress-style conservation arrangements. Political ecology has a long tradition of problematising the ways that conservation is marked by coloniality and perpetuates (neo)colonial violence – with a focus on land policies, political economies, and labour regimes underpinning conservation. There is now growing recognition of how certain species and ecological relations can be enrolled in these processes as well, motivating calls to decolonise ecology itself (Mabele et al. 2023). Drawing from engaged research embedded in a GEF -7 funded Inclusive Conservation Initiative project in the Mid-Ewaso Ng’iro, we reflect on renewed possibilities and persistent challenges of Indigenous-led efforts to conserve biodiversity without preserving settler ecologies. In discussing measures being used to unmake settler ecologies and restore pastoralist ecologies that could be more conducive to biodiversity, we place cultural keystone species in the spotlight, arguing that species of high cultural value for pastoralists may have a unique role to play in catalysing a shift towards ecologies otherwise. This talk is part of the Political Ecology Group meetings series. This talk is included in these lists:Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
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