Extinctions, Invasions and Re-wildings - debating the cultures of biodiversity

Location
A41 Clive Granger, University Park
Date(s)
Wednesday 1st June 2016 (18:00-20:15)
Contact

Naomi Sykes
naomi.sykes@nottingham.ac.uk

Nicola Tuxford
nicola.tuxford@nottingham.ac.uk

Registration URL
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/extinctions-invasions-and-re-wildings-tickets-25572485994
Description

Wednesday 1 June, A41 Clive Granger
6pm - 7.30pm, followed by wine reception (finish 8.15pm)

Register here

Britain’s biodiversity is constantly changing. Since the end of the last Ice Age, the flora, fauna and human populations have been transformed. Some species have been brought to extinction, others have been (re)introduced – the rates and responses fluctuating through time, according to changing environments, human practices and cultural attitudes to nature. Today many see the natural world as something that has been tarnished by humans and there are drives to see Britain, and many other regions of the world, returned to a perceived ‘natural’ state through re-wilding with extinct or locally extirpated species.

To fathom the complexity of the interaction between people and biodiversity and determine appropriate courses of action for the future is beyond any single discipline or interest group. Furthermore, conservation initiatives – be they related to re-wildings, preservation of threatened species or to the management of deliberately introduced species – often fail because they do not engage adequately or appropriately with the cultural aspects that are critically entangled with the plants, animals and the policy-creators themselves. It is, therefore, time for those involved in the many strands of biodiversity research to enter into dialogue with each other and with the public. This event, hosted by Kate Humble, aims to encourage precisely this, seeking to foster discussion and collaboration between those with different perspectives with the aim of mapping out future directions. Come and share your ideas!

Panel members:

Kate Humble – panel chair.
Alastair Ward - Uni8versity of Hull (Invasives)
Naomi Sykes - University of Nottingham (Deeper time perspectives on animal introductions)
Andrew Kitchener - National Museum of Scotland (Re-wilding)
Selina Brace - Natural History Museum, London (Extinctions and re-introductions)
Camilla Morrison-Bell - British Ecological Society (Invasives and Policy)
Garry Marvin - University of Roehampton (Human-animal studies perspectives)

 

Department of Classics and Archaeology

University of Nottingham
University Park
Nottingham, NG7 2RD

Contact details
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