The political ecology of weeds : a scalar approach to landscape transformations

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serval:BIB_70BE10508D12
Type
A part of a book
Publication sub-type
Chapter: chapter ou part
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Publications
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Title
The political ecology of weeds : a scalar approach to landscape transformations
Title of the book
The International Handbook of Political Ecology
Author(s)
Kull Ch. A. , Rangan H.
Publisher
Bryant, R. L.
Address of publication
Edward Elgar
ISBN
9780857936165 (paper)
9780857936172 (eletronic)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2015
Pages
487-500
Language
english
Notes
Kull, CA & H Rangan (2015) The political ecology of weeds: a scalar approach to landscape transformation. In The International Handbook of Political Ecology, edited by Bryant, RL. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 487-500.
Abstract
How do plants that move and spread across landscapes become branded as weeds and thereby objects of contention and control? We outline a political ecology approach that builds on a Lefebvrian understanding of the production of space, identifying three scalar moments that make plants into 'weeds' in different spatial contexts and landscapes. The three moments are: the operational scale, which relates to empirical phenomena in nature and society; the observational scale, which defines formal concepts of these phenomena and their implicit or explicit 'biopower' across institutional and spatial categories; and the interpretive scale, which is communicated through stories and actions expressing human feelings or concerns regarding the phenomena and processes of socio-spatial change. Together, these three scalar moments interact to produce a political ecology of landscape transformation, where biophysical and socio-cultural processes of daily life encounter formal categories and modes of control as well as emotive and normative expectations in shaping landscapes. Using three exemplar 'weeds' - acacia, lantana and ambrosia - our political ecology approach to landscape transformations shows that weeds do not act alone and that invasives are not inherently bad organisms. Humans and weeds go together; plants take advantage of spaces and opportunities that we create. Human desires for preserving certain social values in landscapes in contradiction to actual transformations is often at the heart of definitions of and conflicts over weeds or invasives.
Keywords
political ecology, invasion biology
Open Access
Yes
Create date
30/09/2015 17:43
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:29
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