Mon, Aug 15, 2022: 10:30 AM-11:30 AM
520B
Organizer:
Gabriel Gadsden
Speaker:
Gabriel Gadsden, Dr. Carressa Gerald, Dr. Stephanie Poindexter, Miranda Bernard
Co-organizer:
Anjali D. Boyd, n/a
Moderator:
Anjali D. Boyd, n/a
Session Description: In ecology, framing of environmental variables continually happens as standalone measurements such as distance to road, distance to water, building density, and NDVI. While these variables inform a suite of ecological queries (i.e., home range estimates and fecundity), these variables are incomplete. Importantly, historic environmental variables lack grounding in the social-ecological realities of everyday life. Over the last thirty years, environmental justice has grown into a recognized discipline that challenges the notion that the environment happens in a vacuum but instead is shaped by cultural and social institutions often which prioritize particular people and places. If we assert, society shapes the environment and our culture is woefully unjust, how do issues of EJ relate to and influence ecological phenomena is a relevant line of inquiry? Studies have begun to support this idea of expanding what is considered an environment variable, notably Ghoddousi et al., 2020, which brought to our attention the social consideration of landscape connectivity. However, direct paths or even acknowledgment of how environmental justice intersects with ecology questions remains understated and understudied. In bridging this gap, not only can ecologists broaden their understanding of ecological sensations, but we advance the issues of environmental justice in tandem; that have implications for people and wildlife alike.