Bonding with the Nonhuman World: Why People Feed Wildlife in Japan
Looks at popular esayari (animal-feeding) behavior in Japan, why people do it, and what its effects are.
Looks at popular esayari (animal-feeding) behavior in Japan, why people do it, and what its effects are.
Thom van Dooren draws on his current research on people’s shifting relationships with crows around the world to outline some of the core questions and approaches of “field philosophy.”
Recognizing elephants as moral actors in the institutional space of the elephant stable, Piers Locke reconceives traditionally humanist ethnography as interspecies ethnography.
This essay examines environmental thought in China and the West to propose an “ecological history” that offers new ways to think about the human/nature relationship.
Tabios Hillebrecht examines layers of power involved in human-nature relations, and how they can undermine Rights of Nature.
Mariqueo-Russell highlights the mutually supportive relationship between Rights of Nature and the Precautionary Principal.
Brara relates a story of contemporary India in the process of transition, where legal approaches to Nature are changing.
Berros describes some of the first cases in which Rights of Nature was directly referenced in the courts of Ecuador.