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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13789 | DOI Listing |
J Adv Nurs
November 2024
School of Nursing, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Aim: To describe nurses' and community-based organization representatives' collaborative strategies for advancing climate justice with communities.
Design: This study used a descriptive, qualitative research design.
Methods: Data were gathered from August 2022 to February 2023 with nurses (n = 8) and their community partners (n = 5) in the United States.
Middle East Lit
June 2023
Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Myths and legends in climate fiction are often studied with reference to fantasy and magical realism; yet the relationship between the two forms remains understudied. This article examines the use of both as they overlap in Turkish climate fiction to address the multiscalar complexities of climate change and to offer imaginaries of multispecies solidarity. Through close readings of Ayşegül Yalvaç's (2022; An Istanbul Legend) and Oya Baydar's (2019; Night of the Children-with-Dogs), I demonstrate how the texts adopt a feminist ethics of care to create speculative legends dramatizing cofutures in the making.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
March 2024
Institute of Ethnomusicology, Scientific Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts (ZRC SAZU), 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Nonhuman animal protagonists of folklore texts in the European space have tended to be perceived primarily as performing a symbolic and metaphoric function. But behind the symbols and the metaphors hide real flesh-and-blood nonhuman animals, and flesh-and-blood humans interacting with them, mostly from a position of power. The emerging discipline of zoofolkloristics considers nonhuman animals in their own right.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
January 2024
St. Luke's Campus, University of Exeter, Exeter EX12LU, UK.
Endangered Asian elephants () find themselves at the center of debates involving politics, land use, human-wildlife conflict, and environmental justice. The intensity of such debates has led scholars to label conservation challenges as wicked problems with profound implications on local and global practice. In elephant range states such as Nepal, these debates are made more complex through human 'ownership' of endangered individuals for use in tourism, worship, or co-work.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bioeth Inq
December 2023
Sydney Environment Institute, Discipline of Sociology and Criminology, University of Sydney, Room 350 Social Sciences, A02, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
COVID-19 catalyzed a renewed focus on the interconnected nature of human health. Together with the climate crisis, it highlighted not only intra-human connections but the entanglement of human health with the health of non-human animals, plants, and ecological systems more broadly. In this article, we challenge the persistent notion that humans are ontologically distinct from the rest of nature and the ethics that flow from this understanding.
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