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Summer School "Ecology and Society: Frontiers and Boundaries" / 3 - 7 June 2019

Ecosystems societies Climate change Forests Hydrosystems Atmosphere Biodiversity Agrosystems Pressures Impacts Modelling Pollution Ecotoxicology Biogeochimical cycles Ecology Adaptability
Dégustation - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Dégustation - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Dune du Pyla
Dune du Pyla
City trip - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
City trip - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Ecology and society
Ecology and society
Crédit LabEx COTE
Report by students
Class room - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Class room - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Ecosystems services
Ecosystems services
Round table Global ecology
Round table Global ecology
Conference room
Conference room
Vineyards
Vineyards
Vineyards
Vineyards
Cellars
Cellars
Commodifying ecosystemic services
Commodifying ecosystemic services
Biogeochemical cycles of disrupted ecosystems
Biogeochemical cycles of disrupted ecosystems
Forests week
Forests week
Boat trip
Boat trip
Field trip - Salles
Field trip - Salles
Forest Trip - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Forest Trip - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Crédit, G.Loubota
Crédit, G.Loubota
Field Trip
Field Trip

Only what is counted counts? The politics of biodiversity knowledge - Esther TURNHOUT

Last update Tuesday 19 May 2015

Biodiversity governance is characterized by a strong technocratic orientation. Science-based data, maps and numbers are used in the representation of biodiversity and inform decision making about conservation targets and priorities. In this talk, I will offer a critical engagement with the role of science and scientific knowledge in the representation of biodiversity and the implications of these representations for how we treat biodiversity in practice. My contribution is based on the central idea that biodiversity representations are not neutral mirrors of world but contribute to the constitution of biodiversity as a measurable and governable phenomenon: they are performative. Subsequently, I will use the examples of TEEB and IPBES to demonstrate the emergence of an explicit economic discourse of Ecosystem Services and to analyse how this economic discourse connects with and complements existing technocratic biodiversity discourses. I will conclude by discussing the importance of critical scrutiny of the politics of environmental knowledge.