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Conservation Histories and Humanities: Understanding the Present, Unearthing the Past (Symposium) - Part I

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Programme
Friday, July 10, 2026
11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Room CM.1.26

Details

What can conservation’s past tell us about conservation’s present and its future? This is a vital question, given frequent calls to learn from conservation’s failures and successes, and critiques of conservation’s ‘fadism’, the tendency to constantly look for the new, short-term solutions over understanding conservation as a longer-term enterprise (Chambers et al, 2022, Massarella et al, 2018). Despite the work of some key academics, much of the work done by environmental historians goes unnoticed within mainstream conservation discourse (Pooley, 2013). Similarly, rare are the cases when an ecologist bridges the disciplines by training as a historian (Martin, 2022). The purpose of this session is to explore the history of conservation, bringing key events, projects, and trends to light, and to discuss their implications for current and future ideas and policies in conservation. It will put conservationists, their work, values, struggles, successes and failures into their historical context. By doing this, it will look at how we created the conservation of the present, the institutions, policies, practices and knowledge that now exists. It is part of a wider move to increase dialogue between humanities disciplines such as history, philosophy, and literary studies, and conservation science and practice.


Speakers and Presentation Titles

Mr. Jan-Niklas Kniewel
University of Bern

Failing in Circles: Decolonization, Transnational NGOs and the Roots of “Neoliberal Conservation”

Prof. Astrid M. Eckert
Professor
Emory University

Subversive Science: Insubordinate Nature Conservation Efforts in the German Democratic Republic (GDR)

Dr. Jeff Schauer
Associate Professor
University Of Nevada, Las Vegas

Too many or not enough?: the politics, process, and afterlives of animal counts in 1950s and 1960s Zambia

Dr. Cormac Walsh
Carl Von Ossietzky University Of Oldenburg

Towards A Historical Geography of Bird Migration in the Anthropocene

Ms. Stella Portelli
PhD Researcher
Wageningen University

Hunting tourism as a legacy of tensions between bird hunters and bird protectionists


Organiser

George Holmes
University Of Leeds

Monica Vasile
University Of Oulu

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