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Unity in Biodiversity: Reinventing nation and nature in Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 03:56 authored by Aidan DavisonAidan Davison
The idea of biodiversity is at once scientific and political, cultivating respect for the multiplicity and inventiveness of life, and warning against disrespect. It is to the politics of biodiversity that this paper is directed. The conception of this idea is described, followed by an account of its introduction into questions of Australian nationhood. Attention is on what biodiversity reveals about modern societies and what this reveals about the interplay of nature and culture that is remaking Earth. This is not to ignore the devastation of non-human life by modern humanity nor to deny that this could be humanity’s undoing. It is to recognise that the possibility of human respect for non-human life lies with culture as much as with nature. I argue that the idea of biodiversity will not achieve the political goals set for it unless it cultivates respect for the inventiveness of culture and for the myriad ways in which culture and nature reinvent each other. I show something of this cultural richness in the context of claims that a postcolonial, globalised Australian nation can be united through respect for native biodiversity.

History

Publication title

Social Alternatives

Volume

29

Pagination

7-12

ISSN

0155-0306

Department/School

School of Geography, Planning and Spatial Sciences

Publisher

Social Alternatives

Place of publication

Brisbane, Australia

Rights statement

Copyright © 2010 Social Alternatives

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in human society

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