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Restoring Layered Landscapes brings together historians,
geographers, philosophers, and interdisciplinary scholars to
explore ecological restoration in landscapes with complex histories
shaped by ongoing interactions between humans and nature. For many
decades, ecological restoration - particularly in the United States
- focused on returning degraded sites to conditions that prevailed
prior to human influence. This model has been broadened in recent
decades, and restoration now increasingly focuses on the recovery
of ecological functions and processes rather than on returning a
site to a specific historical state. Nevertheless, neither the
theory nor the practice of restoration has fully come to terms with
the challenges of restoring layered landscapes, where nature and
culture shape one another in deep and ongoing relationships. Former
military and industrial sites provide paradigmatic examples of
layered landscapes. Many of these sites are not only characterized
by natural ecosystems worth preserving and restoring, but also
embody significant political, social, and cultural histories. This
volume grapples with the challenges of restoring and interpreting
such complex sites: What should we aim to restore in such places?
How can restoration adequately take the legacies of human use into
account? Should traces of the past be left on the landscape, and
how can interpretive strategies be creatively employed to make
visible the complex legacies of an open pit mine or chemical
weapons manufacturing plant? Restoration aims to create new value,
but not always without loss. Restoration often disrupts existing
ecosystems, infrastructure, and artifacts. The chapters in this
volume consider what restoration can tell us more generally about
the relationship between continuity and change, and how the past
can and should inform our thinking about the future. These
insights, in turn, will help foster a more thoughtful approach to
human-environment relations in an era of unprecedented
anthropogenic global environmental change.
When viewed from space, the Korean Peninsula is crossed by a thin
green ribbon. On the ground, its mix of dense vegetation and
cleared borderlands serves as home to dozens of species that are
extinct or endangered elsewhere on the peninsula. This is Korea's
demilitarized zone--one of the most dangerous places on earth for
humans, and paradoxically one of the safest for wildlife. Although
this zone was not intentionally created for conservation, across
the globe hundreds of millions of acres of former military zones
and bases are being converted to restoration areas, refuges, and
conservation lands. David G. Havlick has traveled the world
visiting these spaces of military-to-wildlife transition, and in
Bombs Away he explores both the challenges--physical, historical,
and cultural--and fascinating ecological possibilities of military
site conversions. Looking at particular international sites of
transition--from Indiana's Big Oaks National Wildlife Refuge to
Cold War remnants along the former Iron Curtain--Havlick argues
that these new frontiers of conservation must accomplish seemingly
antithetical aims: rebuilding and protecting ecosystems, or
restoring life, while also commemorating the historical and
cultural legacies of warfare and militarization. Developing these
ideas further, he shows that despite the ecological devastation
often wrought by military testing and training, these activities
need not be inconsistent with environmental goals, and in some
cases can even complement them--a concept he calls ecological
militarization. A profound, clear explication of landscapes both
fraught and fecund, marked by death but also reservoirs of life,
Bombs Away shows us how "military activities, conservation goals,
and ecological restoration efforts are made to work together to
create new kinds of places and new conceptions of place."
Restoring Layered Landscapes brings together historians,
geographers, philosophers, and interdisciplinary scholars to
explore ecological restoration in landscapes with complex histories
shaped by ongoing interactions between humans and nature. For many
decades, ecological restoration - particularly in the United States
- focused on returning degraded sites to conditions that prevailed
prior to human influence. This model has been broadened in recent
decades, and restoration now increasingly focuses on the recovery
of ecological functions and processes rather than on returning a
site to a specific historical state. Nevertheless, neither the
theory nor the practice of restoration has fully come to terms with
the challenges of restoring layered landscapes, where nature and
culture shape one another in deep and ongoing relationships. Former
military and industrial sites provide paradigmatic examples of
layered landscapes. Many of these sites are not only characterized
by natural ecosystems worth preserving and restoring, but also
embody significant political, social, and cultural histories. This
volume grapples with the challenges of restoring and interpreting
such complex sites: What should we aim to restore in such places?
How can restoration adequately take the legacies of human use into
account? Should traces of the past be left on the landscape, and
how can interpretive strategies be creatively employed to make
visible the complex legacies of an open pit mine or chemical
weapons manufacturing plant? Restoration aims to create new value,
but not always without loss. Restoration often disrupts existing
ecosystems, infrastructure, and artifacts. The chapters in this
volume consider what restoration can tell us more generally about
the relationship between continuity and change, and how the past
can and should inform our thinking about the future. These
insights, in turn, will help foster a more thoughtful approach to
human-environment relations in an era of unprecedented
anthropogenic global environmental change.
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