Article ID: CBB243288201

The politics of a natural laboratory: Claiming territory and governing life in the Galápagos Islands (August 2018)

unapi

The Galápagos Islands are often called a natural laboratory of evolution. This metaphor provides a powerful way of understanding space that, through scientific research, conservation and tourism, has shaped the archipelago over the past century. Combining environmental histories of field science with political ecologies of conservation biopower, this article foregrounds the territorial production of the archipelago as a living laboratory. In the mid-twentieth century, foreign naturalists used the metaphor to make land claims as they campaigned to create the Galápagos National Park and Charles Darwin Research Station. Unlike earlier ‘parks for science’, these institutions were not established under colonial rule, but through postwar institutions of transnational environmental governance that nonetheless continued colonial approaches to nature protection. In the following decades, the metaphor became a rationale for territorial management through biopolitical strategies designed to ensure isolation by controlling human access and introduced species. This article’s approach extends the scope of what is at stake in histories of field science: not only the production of knowledge and authority of knowledge claims, but also the foundation of global environmental governance and authority over life and death in particular places. Yet while the natural laboratory was a powerful geographical imagination, analysis shows that it was also an unsustainable goal.

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Authors & Contributors
Henry, Emmanuel
Prudham, Scott
Rijcke, Sarah de
Moats, David
Valentin Thomas
Aguiton, Sara Angeli
Journals
Science, Technology and Human Values
Social Studies of Science
Journal of the History of Biology
Science as Culture
Publishers
MIT Press
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Technoscience; science and technology studies
Governance
Science and politics
Power (social sciences)
Expertise
Regulation
People
Latour, Bruno
Time Periods
21st century
20th century
19th century
20th century, late
Places
Great Britain
United States
Sweden
Norway
India
Berlin (Germany)
Institutions
European Commission
United States. Food and Drug Administration
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