Streaming Media
Presentation Abstract
Conservation biology: a multi-disciplinary science aimed at understanding biodiversity loss with an orientation towards facilitating the protection of species, communities, and ecosystems. Unlike other scientific disciplines, conservation biologists fall into a unique category of socio-ecological influencers (i.e., environmentalists) because the protection of biodiversity, within the context of the Anthropocene, means protecting species from the historically unsustainable exploitation of nature by humans. A shift from domination of nature to an ecosophy based on mutualism has begun. As a result, nature is becoming more frequently viewed as possessing non-human personhood. Given this paradigm shift in western culture to acknowledge what indigenous cultures all over the world have known for millennia means that advocating for conservation science includes dismantling systems that threaten other beings’ right to self-sovereignty. It is this fight that is at the core of many socio-political revolutions—and is at the heart of many environmental causes as well. Washington state has a deep history of ripping away the self-sovereignty of beings’ by commodifying bodies, selling them to a market born out of slave-economics driven by capitalistic greed. More explicitly, I am referring to the capture of wild orca from the Puget Sound that were then sold to Sea World in the 1960s. In this talk, I will discuss the urgent need for Washington state’s government to begin to conceptualize and act upon ecological and economic reparations owed to orca. Drawing on the foundational principles of social movements, focusing on civil rights, animal rights, and the deep ecology movements, I will discuss the need for Washington state policy-makers to apply what conservation psychology terms ‘frame bridging’ and ‘frame aligning’ into wildlife protection plans for orca. The time for honoring the self-sovereignty of non-human persons is now and it begins with orca.
Session Title
Ethics and Southern Resident Killer Whales Recovery 1
Conference Track
SSE7: Ethics, Environmental Justice, & the Future
Conference Name
Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference (2022 : Online)
Document Type
Event
SSEC Identifier
SSE-traditionals-109
Start Date
26-4-2022 11:30 AM
End Date
26-4-2022 1:00 PM
Type of Presentation
Oral
Genre/Form
conference proceedings; presentations (communicative events)
Contributing Repository
Digital content made available by University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University.
Subjects – Topical (LCSH)
Killer whale--Salish Sea (B.C. and Wash.); Endangered species--Salish Sea (B.C. and Wash.); Wildlife conservation--Salish Sea (B.C. and Wash.)
Geographic Coverage
Salish Sea (B.C. and Wash.)
Rights
Copying of this document in whole or in part is allowable only for scholarly purposes. It is understood, however, that any copying or publication of this document for commercial purposes, or for financial gain, shall not be allowed without the author's written permission.
Type
Text
Language
English
Format
application/pdf
Included in
Fresh Water Studies Commons, Marine Biology Commons, Natural Resources and Conservation Commons, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology Commons
The Time for Reparations from Washington State Is Now! As Non-Human Persons, Orcas Deserve Justice
Conservation biology: a multi-disciplinary science aimed at understanding biodiversity loss with an orientation towards facilitating the protection of species, communities, and ecosystems. Unlike other scientific disciplines, conservation biologists fall into a unique category of socio-ecological influencers (i.e., environmentalists) because the protection of biodiversity, within the context of the Anthropocene, means protecting species from the historically unsustainable exploitation of nature by humans. A shift from domination of nature to an ecosophy based on mutualism has begun. As a result, nature is becoming more frequently viewed as possessing non-human personhood. Given this paradigm shift in western culture to acknowledge what indigenous cultures all over the world have known for millennia means that advocating for conservation science includes dismantling systems that threaten other beings’ right to self-sovereignty. It is this fight that is at the core of many socio-political revolutions—and is at the heart of many environmental causes as well. Washington state has a deep history of ripping away the self-sovereignty of beings’ by commodifying bodies, selling them to a market born out of slave-economics driven by capitalistic greed. More explicitly, I am referring to the capture of wild orca from the Puget Sound that were then sold to Sea World in the 1960s. In this talk, I will discuss the urgent need for Washington state’s government to begin to conceptualize and act upon ecological and economic reparations owed to orca. Drawing on the foundational principles of social movements, focusing on civil rights, animal rights, and the deep ecology movements, I will discuss the need for Washington state policy-makers to apply what conservation psychology terms ‘frame bridging’ and ‘frame aligning’ into wildlife protection plans for orca. The time for honoring the self-sovereignty of non-human persons is now and it begins with orca.