Feminist approaches to marine social science 1: Situated knowledges at the intersection between (more-than-human) lifeworlds and governance
Type: Virtual Paper
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Start / End Time: 4/8/2021 03:05 PM (Pacific Time (US & Canada)) - 4/8/2021 04:20 PM (Pacific Time (US & Canada))
Room: Virtual 30
Organizer(s):
Madeleine Gustavsson
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Chairs: Madeleine Gustavsson
Agenda
Role | Participant |
Presenter | Samm Newton |
Presenter | Maya Weeks UC Davis |
Presenter | Christine Knott |
Presenter | Katherine Ball Arizona State University |
Discussant | Madeleine Gustavsson Ruralis |
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Presentation(s), if applicable
Christine Knott, Test; Equitable and Just Seafood Infrastructures |
Katherine Ball, Arizona State University; Alaska Chop: Rhetorics of Alaska Marine Governance |
Samm Newton, University of Wisconsin - Madison; Pteropods Realized: Transformative Encounters and the Co-Production of Environmental Value |
Maya Weeks, UC Davis; Death to Disposability in the North Pacific Gyre |
Description
Feminist theory has a long history of informing gendered aspects of fisheries and other marine industries– although marginal within the context of marine and fisheries research more broadly. In light of recent shifts from sectoral perspectives to that of understanding the ‘ocean’ in a more holistic light (e.g. embodied in ideas around the Blue Economy), we want to explore feminist futures for the oceans in these two sessions. Building on a series of panels on ‘Fishy Feminisms’ at the MARE conference in 2019 where we sought to explore the fisheries field beyond “gender = women”, these sessions continue this work by exploring various feminist approaches in marine and fisheries contexts more broadly. The sessions, organised as part of Ocean Frontiers Institute’s (OFI) Future Ocean and Coastal Infrastructures (FOCI) project, aim to build a network, to carry out a dialogue across disciplines, methods and frameworks. In these two paper sessions we seek to engage with questions related to past, presents and futures of the sea, its governance, those living above and below the sea surface (people, fish and other marine beings), land-sea interactions as well as practical and theoretical questions around the future sustainability and equity of the sea. Papers will include discussions around marine industries, feminist theories of ocean space, marine governance, marine conservation, sustainability, gender relations and the sea as well as more-than-human perspectives and equity/justice issues. The first session focus on situated knowledges at the intersections between (more-than-human) lifeworlds and governance. The second session focus on methodologies and ways of understanding the inequities of oceans, lives and economies.
Feminist approaches to marine social science 1: Situated knowledges at the intersection between (more-than-human) lifeworlds and governance
Description
Virtual Paper
Session starts at 4/8/2021 03:05 PM (Pacific Time (US & Canada))
Contact the Primary Organizer
Madeleine Gustavsson - M.c.gustavsson@exeter.ac.uk