Organizing Nature

£19.99

Organizing Nature

Turning Canada’s Ecosystems into Resources

Central / national / federal government policies Geography Physical geography and topography Arid zones, deserts Plains and grasslands Wetlands, swamps, fens Forests and woodland Coastlines Coral reefs Mountains and uplands Biogeography Environmental policy and protocols

Authors: Alice Cohen, Andrew Biro

Dinosaur mascot

Language: English

Published by: University of Toronto Press

Published on: 26th May 2023

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 282 pages

ISBN: 9781487594862


Organizing Nature

Organizing Nature explores how the environment is organized in Canada’s resource-dependent economy. The book examines how particular ecosystem components come to be understood as natural resources and how these resources in turn are used to organize life in Canada.

In tracing transitions from "ecosystem component" to "resource," this book weaves together the roles that commodification, Indigenous dispossession, and especially a false nature-society binary play in facilitating the conceptual and material construction of resources. Alice Cohen and Andrew Biro present an alternative to this false nature-society binary: one that sees Canadians and their environments in a constant process of making and remaking each other. Through a series of case studies focused on specific resources – fish, forests, carbon, water, land, and life – the book explores six channels through which this remaking occurs: governments, communities, built environments, culture and ideas, economies, and bodies and identities.

Ultimately, Organizing Nature encourages readers to think critically about what is at stake when Canadians (re)produce myths about the false separation between Canadian peoples and their environments.

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