From ark to bank: extinction, proxies and biocapitals in ex-situ biodiversity conservation practices
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24894Date
2018-09-05Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
This paper takes a critical approach to understanding the social and cultural
‘work’ of natural heritage conservation, focussing specifically on ex-situ
biodiversity cryopreservation practices. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork
with the Frozen Ark, a UK-based ‘frozen zoo’ aiming to preserve the DNA of
endangered animal species, the paper situates the development of nonhuman animal biobanks in relation to current anxieties regarding the
anticipated loss of biodiversity. These developments are seeding new global
futures by driving advances in technologies, techniques and practices of
cloning, de-extinction, re-wilding and potential species re-introduction.
While this provides impetus to rethink the nature of ‘nature’ itself, as something which is actively made by such conservation practices, we also aim to
make a contribution to the development of a series of critical concepts for
analysis of ex-situ and in-situ natural heritage preservation practices, which
further illuminates their roles in building distinctive futures, through discussion of the relationship between conservation proxies, biobanking and
biocapitals. We suggest that questions of value and the role of future
making in relation to heritage cannot be disassociated from an analysis of
economic issues, and, therefore, the paper is framed within a broader
discussion of the place of ex-situ biodiversity cryopreservation in the late
capitalist global economy
Publisher
RoutledgeCitation
Breithoff E, Harrison R. From ark to bank: extinction, proxies and biocapitals in ex-situ biodiversity conservation practices. International Journal of Heritage Studies (IJHS). 2018Metadata
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Copyright 2018 The Author(s)