Heaven and Earth: Images and Strategies for Representing the Planet
Third Floor, Levis Faculty Center
919 W. Illinois St.
Urbana
Environmentalism in the year 2000 is seen by many as inevitably linked to globalism. Sheila Jasanoff compares the visual, political, and scientific repertoires for representing the environment in three countries and suggests that global environmentalism remains a deeply contested concept. The construction of the environment as local or global does not follow automatically from advances in scientific knowledge but reflects deeper commitments concerning human relations with nature. Environmental representation thus serves as a window on the co-production of natural and social order.
Sponsored by: Department of Political Science, Department of Sociology, Environmental Council, Bioindicators Group, Program in Science, Technology, Information and Medicine
In conjunction with: International Programs and Studies, Natural Resources and Environmental Science, Office of Women in Development, Program in South Asian Studies and Middle Eastern Studies, Women's Studies Program
Department of Science and Public Policy, Harvard University