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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
Vineyard - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Vineyard - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Cellars
Cellars
Vineyard - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Vineyard - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Class room - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Class room - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Group 2018 - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Group 2018 - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Field trip - Salles
Field trip - Salles
Vineyards
Vineyards
Visiting Bordeaux
Visiting Bordeaux
Field Trip
Field Trip
Cellars
Cellars
Conference room
Conference room
Fieldtrip Ciron - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Fieldtrip Ciron - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Class room - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Class room - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Boat trip
Boat trip
Field trip - Salles
Field trip - Salles
Conference room
Conference room
Visiting Bordeaux
Visiting Bordeaux
Boat trip
Boat trip
Evening
Evening
Crédit LabEx COTE
Report by students

Signs of a new politics of nature: reflections on the Anthropocene

Last update Monday 19 June 2017

by Jelle Behagel

As human action is increasingly having an effect on global processes, including climate change, global pollution, and land use change, the processes that drive societies and the processes that drive nature are becoming increasingly intertwined. Examples of river rights, plastic soups, and regional droughts can illustrate how ecological and political processes are directly influencing each other and shaping territories. These examples also illustrate a new politics of nature that is emerging slowly but surely across the globe. This type of politics is less concerned with identity and values and more with establishing new connections between society and nature in the public domain. As a result, nature governance is increasingly also health, water, energy, and food governance, inviting us to rethink what it means to govern nature.