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Session Submission Type: Panel
This panel will bring together papers on ecological social sciences, with a focus on Indigenous and local community experiences of territorial and water governability. Papers will examine how, for example, notions of property shape different understandings/imaginations and practices of nature/environment, and what this means for human and non-human lives and worlds in Latin America and Australia.
Beyond Property: Indigenous Territoriality and Commons Governance in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta - Sara Mejia-Munoz, Student
The Chilean Case: Rethinking water governance in extreme climate scenarios, from private property to public good - Pablo A Aranda Valenzuela, The University of Queensland
Global Governance and Branding: Challenges to Ecology as Property From a Study of ‘Club Apples’ in Australia - Ainá Sant'Anna Fernandes, University of Queenslans
Living Rivers, Settler Laws: Legal Pluralism and the (De)Colonial Politics of Freshwater Governance - Sarah Thomson, The University of Queensland / Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
Unruly Groundwater: Corporate Capture, Epistemic Resistance and Possibilities for Alternative Governability - Sally Babidge, The University of Queensland