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Environmental Change and Conservation in Africa - Einzelansicht

  • Funktionen:
  • Zur Zeit keine Belegung möglich
Veranstaltungsart Seminar Veranstaltungsnummer
SWS 2 Semester WiSe 2024/25
Einrichtung Historisches Institut   Sprache englisch
Belegungsfrist 01.10.2024 - 10.11.2024   
Gruppe 1:
     Zur Zeit keine Belegung möglich
    Tag Zeit Rhythmus Dauer Raum Lehrperson Ausfall-/Ausweichtermine Max. Teilnehmer/-innen
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Seminar Fr 14:00 bis 16:00 Einzeltermin am 01.11.2024 1.09.2.13 Kniewel ,
Prof. Dr. Schenck
 
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Seminar Fr 10:00 bis 16:00 Einzeltermin am 17.01.2025 1.09.2.13 Kniewel ,
Prof. Dr. Schenck
 
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Seminar Sa 10:00 bis 16:00 Einzeltermin am 18.01.2025 1.09.2.13 Kniewel ,
Prof. Dr. Schenck
 
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Seminar Fr 10:00 bis 16:00 Einzeltermin am 24.01.2025 1.09.2.13 Kniewel ,
Prof. Dr. Schenck
 
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Seminar Sa 10:00 bis 16:00 Einzeltermin am 25.01.2025 1.09.2.13 Kniewel ,
Prof. Dr. Schenck
 
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Seminar Fr 12:00 bis 16:00 Einzeltermin am 31.01.2025 1.09.2.13 Kniewel ,
Prof. Dr. Schenck
 
Kommentar

The global north’s hunger for natural resources has, irreversibly perhaps, altered the global landscape. As the historian Corey Ross has noted: at the heart of European imperialism was an attempt to transform forests, savannahs, rivers, coastal plains and even deserts into productive and legible spaces. However, this also brought unprecedented environmental destruction upon many tropical regions, including Africa. This havoc, in turn, spurred countless initiatives from the late 1800s onwards to protect whatever supposedly ‘wild’ spaces and species still existed.

Perhaps no other place has captured the imagination of conservationists as much as ‘Africa’, which became not only a major frontline but also a laboratory in the struggle to protect ‘wilderness’ and biodiversity. However, all too often, these efforts led to the violent dispossession of rural Africans. Even from a strictly ecological standpoint, these attempts were often of questionable success. So intricate is the history of conservation in Africa that some critical (political) ecologists and human rights activist even call for the ‘decolonisation’ of the conservation sector.

This course explores how the exploitation and conservation of nature affected the organisation of rural spaces and livelihoods in Africa throughout the 20th and 21st century. It is doing so by tracing their evolution through three distinct periods: (1) the early twentieth century when most of the continent was under colonial rule, (2) the post-independence period when nationalist African governments replaced the colonists, and NGOs became increasingly crucial actors in conservation, and (3) the last four decades when neoliberalism became an increasingly influential factor affecting the exploitation and protection of nature.

This course is relevant for students interested in critically engaging with the history of Africa, science, nature conservation and human-nature relations. However, the examples of environmental degradation and protection also allow us to gain a deeper understanding of a wide variety of other themes, including colonialism, decolonisation, north-south relations, indigeneity, and (African) nationalism.

Students will:

 

- Critically engage with interdisciplinary research from fields such as history, social anthropology, human geography, and political science.

- Gain experience in critically analysing historical primary sources.

- Scrutinise various scientific and political concepts from the fields of sustainable development, conservation (biology), social anthropology and human geography.

- Reflect critically on the role of colonial and postcolonial (environmental) policies in shaping human-nature relations in Africa.

- Analyse how environmental policies were impacted by international, national, and local actors.

Literatur

Sven Beckert, Ulbe Bosma, Mindi Schneider, and Eric Vanhaute, ‘Commo-dity frontiers and the transformation of the global countryside: a research agenda’, Journal of Global History 16, No. 3, 435–450. 

Tamara Giles-Vernick, Cutting the Vines of the Past: Environmental Histo - ries of the Central African Rain Forest (Charlottesville 2002). 

Bernhard Gissibl, The Nature of German Imperialism: Conservation and the Politics of Wildlife in Colonial East Africa (New York 2019). 

Thomas Lekan, Our Gigantic Zoo: A German Quest to Save the Serengeti (Oxford 2020). 

Corey Ross, Ecology and Power in the Age of Empire: Europe and the Transformation of the Tropical World (Oxford 2017). 

Jeff Schauer, Wildlife between Empire and Nation in Twentieth-Century Af-rica (Cham 2019). 

 

Leistungsnachweis

A final paper in accordance with the student’s Studienordnung. This written assignments can be completed both in English or German.


Strukturbaum
Die Veranstaltung wurde 8 mal im Vorlesungsverzeichnis WiSe 2024/25 gefunden:
Vorlesungsverzeichnis
Philosophische Fakultät
Historisches Institut
Bachelor of Education
Geschichte (Prüfungsversion ab WiSe 2013/14)
Pflichtmodule
GES_BA_021 - Aufbaumodul Staat und Gesellschaft in der Moderne  - - - 1 offens Buch
Geschichte (Prüfungsversion ab WiSe 2022/23)
Wahlpflichtmodule 2
GES_BA_016 - Aufbaumodul Globalgeschichte  - - - 2 offens Buch
Zwei-Fach Bachelor
Geschichte (Prüfungsversion ab WiSe 2015/16)
Zweitfach
Wahlpflichtmodule
GES_BA_016 - Aufbaumodul Globalgeschichte  - - - 3 offens Buch
Erstfach
Wahlpflichtmodule
GES_BA_016 - Aufbaumodul Globalgeschichte  - - - 4 offens Buch
Bachelor of Arts
Geschichte, Politik und Gesellschaft (Prüfungsversion ab WiSe 2016/17)
Pflichtmodule
Geschichte
GES_BA_016 - Aufbaumodul Globalgeschichte  - - - 5 offens Buch
Geschichte, Politik und Gesellschaft (Prüfungsversion ab WiSe 2020/21)
Pflichtmodule
Geschichte
GES_BA_016 - Aufbaumodul Globalgeschichte  - - - 6 offens Buch
Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät
Wirtschaftswissenschaften
Bachelor of Science
Volkswirtschaftslehre (Prüfungsversion ab WiSe 2015/16)
Ergänzungsfach Geschichte
Wahlpflichtmodule
GES_BA_016 - Aufbaumodul Globalgeschichte  - - - 7 offens Buch
Sozialwissenschaften
Bachelor of Arts
Soziologie (Prüfungsversion ab WiSe 2017/18)
Ergänzungsfach Geschichte
Aufbaustudium
GES_BA_016 - Aufbaumodul Globalgeschichte  - - - 8 offens Buch