The Transdisciplinary Political Ecology working group organized three panels titled ‘Decolonizing the normative foundations of Political Ecology’ at the Pollen conference 2024 in Lima, Peru. The presentations were tied together in their political ecology approach and collaborations with indigenous communities. Given below is a list of all the presentations:
Title | Author | Institution |
Unlocking the Potential of Seagrass Ecosystems Through Locally-led Valuation Approaches | Chloe King | University of Cambridge – Department of Geography |
Everyday accumulation in Argentina. The ‘not so spectacular’ non-operational and pinprick land deals in the Chaco Province | Juan Diego Ayala | University of Bergen – Department of Geography |
Rural Political Ecology and the Dynamics of Extinguishing Commons in Chitral, Pakistan: A Case Study of Shifting Pastoralist Livelihoods | Abdul Wahid Khan | University of Oxford |
Frontier Narratives and the Construction of a Sense of Belonging Among Conservation Practitioners in the Manu National Park, Perú | Eduardo Salazar Moreira | Victoria University of Wellington |
Maretório: the sea as cultural heritage, identity and the singularities of land/sea interaction in Coastal-Marine Extractive Reserves | Fábio Luís de Campos | University of Campinas, Institute of Geosciences |
The imprint of Nature in the Mapuche World: Decolonizing the normative foundations of the Antrhopocene | Cristobal Balbontín | Universidad Austral de Chile |
How environmental conservation affect society-culture-ecology relations: A case study from central India | Saurabh Chowdhury | University of Calgary – Department of Anthropology |
Interest Convergence: A Case for Indigenous Legal Theory and Indigenous Supremacy in a Post-Capitalist Age of De-Growth | Malika Chatterji | Critical Race Studies, UCLA School of Law |
Environment and Hydrocarbons in the Amazon: Discourses and Power in Peru’s Camisea | Ana Watson Jimenez | University of Calgary – Department of Political Sciences |
Unpacking Tiger-Human Conflicts, Conservation Politics and Gendered Dimension of Impacts in Bangladesh’s Sundarbans Mangroves | Sujoy Subroto | University of Calgary – Department of Geography |