“Refiguring conservation in/for “the Anthropocene”: the global lives of the orangutan’ (GLO) is a five-year research project (Jan 2018-Dec 2022) funded by the European Research Council (Starting Grant #758494). It is led by Dr Liana Chua (Principal Investigator), Reader in Anthropology at Ã÷ÐÇ°ËØÔ, who works together with postdocs Dr Viola Schreer and Hannah Fair, and PhD student Anna StÄ™pieÅ„.GLO puts socio-cultural anthropology to work in increasingly interdisciplinary conversations about multispecies entanglements and ‘the Anthropocene’. It draws on two distinctive anthropological strengths – in-depth ethnography and multiply-scaled comparison – to flesh out the big, sometimes abstract, questions raised by global conservation debates and policies. Using multi-sited ethnography, it explores how contemporary orangutan conservation is responding to the challenges posed by what is widely known as ‘the Anthropocene’ – a term that encapsulates the overwhelming, transformative impact of human activity on the planet.
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This project has received funding from the (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 758494.
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Project last modified 09/01/2024