In this episode, Ewa Gorska sits down with Professor Irus Braverman from the University at Buffalo (USA), to delve into her latest book, "Settling Nature: The Conservation Regime in Palestine/Israel” .
-
While settler colonialism is often examined through a political and social lens, Professor Braverman sheds light on the role of nature and other-than-human natures within this framework.
-
One of the key aspects explored is land dispossession in the name of protection . In Israel nearly 25 percent of the country's total land mass has already been designated as a nature reserve or a national park . However, the creation of national reserves and parks in Israel and the occupied West Bank have resulted in the removal of human populations.
-
Another important element of the process of managing nature is judaization and the symbolical reintroduction and protection of the biblical landscape .
-
The episode also takes a turn towards the management and tensions surrounding animals in this settler colonial context . The dichotomies between domestication and wilderness, desired and undesired, “legal” and “Illegal” animals are explored.
-
The conversation also touches upon the complex relationship between militarization and nature in Israel . The example of the griffon vulture serves as a point of discussion, showcasing the entanglement of nature and technology.
-
The episode concludes with a broader examination of conservationism and its entanglements with politics . While nature protection is generally regarded as important, we raise the question of whether conservationism in Palestine-Israel can be neutral or positive. .
Jest to odcinek podkastu:
Reorient.pl
Reorient.pl to podcast popularnonaukowy, skupiający się na różnorodności kulturowej i przełamywaniu stereotypów, prowadzony przez dr Ewę Górską. Podcast powstaje dzięki wsparciu Matron i Patronów na Patronite.pl.