Eve Bratman

Eve Bratman
pas labex
pas Eurias
Résidents Programme FIAS

dates de séjour

01/09/2023 - 30/06/2024

discipline

Sciences de la terre, de l’environnement et du climat

Fonction d’origine

Professeur associé

Institution d’origine

Franklin & Marshall College (Etats-Unis)

pays d'origine

États-Unis

projet de recherche

Honey and Influence: The politics of saving the bees and the ethics of a sustainable future

The project involves writing a book about the politics of pollinator protection. It entails a globally reaching investigation into the relationship between agriculture, human settlements, and biodiversity protection. The project argues for a new ethical approach to landscape and relationship to biodiversity, which I call "ecological rapprochement."

 

The argument is developed through chapters that treat European pesticide regulations, pollinator- centered urban beekeeping and urban planning in the U.S. and Costa Rica, the resurgence of stingless beekeeping in the Yucatán peninsula, and pollinator activism around the world. The project focuses on a tandem concern for addressing agricultural sustainability issues (especially pertinent for SDG Goals 2.3 and 2.4), alongside protection of biodiversity (SDG Goal 15.5).

 

The proposed manuscript is topically about bees, but its contribution is centrally about how humankind can better understand the myriad possibilities for thinking about, understanding, and relating to nature. 

biographie

Associate Professor of Environmental Studies in the Department of Earth & Environment at Franklin & Marshall College, Pennsylvania. As a scholar, teacher, and citizen, she merges scholarship on sustainability governance with a social justice lens to foster a more socially and ecologically interconnected world. 

 

Her research and teaching focus on a range of related issues: urban sustainability and prospects for climate justice, and how pollinator protection relates to a range of issues in global environmental politics issues. Dr. Bratman's recognitions and awards include: Pennsylvania Environmental Resource Consortium Sustainability Champion, Aldo and Estella Leopold Writing Resident, and Fulbright Scholar.

 

She is author of an award-winning book: Governing the Rainforest: Sustainable Development in the Brazilian Amazon (Oxford University Press, 2019; Lynton Keith Caldwell Prize winner, 2020). The question of how sustainable development is envisioned and carried into politics orients all of her work. She is a political ecologist with interdisciplinary training in international relations (PhD 2009, American University’s School of International Service).