Abstract

Due to habitat fragmentation, Brazil's Atlantic Forest is considered one of the world's most threatened biodiversity hotspots. Much of the biome has become extinct of its largest-bodied mammals,leading some to refer it as a 'half-empty forest.' One of the ways conservation actors are responding to this crisis is by utilizing Global Positioning System(GPS), camera trapping, and remote sensing satellite imagery. Together, these tools enable the collection of data at unprecedent levels. By intensifying wildlife monitoring, it is thought that better-directed actions can be taken to avoid species extinction. Although there is a nascent body of research in political ecology examining the role of these new technologies in conservation,so far there has been little exploration of what this implies for the transformation of the governance of conservation spaces. Bringing together literatures on biopolitics of conservation and conservation technologies, this article reflects on the ways new technologies are changing the biopolitical governance of conservation in the Atlantic Forest. I argue that the increase of information flows, together with the ability to process data through models and algorithms, intensifies the capability of biopolitical governance to justify claims for new protected areas, while changing ecological subjectivities. With the increased use of remote sensing technologies, some ecologists are being distanced from the field, and are consequently having less interactions with rural communities. As pressures on biodiversity increase, this may facilitate advocacy for coercive conservation measures that have adverse impacts on local communities.

Highlights

  • The Atlantic Forest, spanning the eastern coast of Brazil, is considered one of the world's most important 'biodiversity hotspots', due to its significant number of endemic species facing extinction (Myers et al 2000)

  • In its original formulation, Foucault intended biopolitics to be a framework to analyze human populations, yet some argue "that we have an anemic understanding of biopower if we look only at human life" (Biermann and Mansfield 2014:259)

  • This loss of 'Spirit' in knowledge production and the compulsion to calibrate 'The Other', are two key concepts that I will return to later in the article, as they will help to explain how new technologies are shaping the subjectivities of ecologists, and what implications this may have for conservation's relationship with local communities in face of species extinction

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Summary

Introduction

The Atlantic Forest, spanning the eastern coast of Brazil, is considered one of the world's most important 'biodiversity hotspots', due to its significant number of endemic species facing extinction (Myers et al 2000). If the current situation is unchanged, species extinctions are sure to follow in the future, with larger-bodied mammals being most severely at risk (Bogoni et al 2018) As this biodiversity crisis intensifies, new technologies have simultaneously emerged that promise to aid conservation efforts by transforming the flows of information in biodiversity monitoring (Ritts and Bakker 2018). A growing body of work has extended Foucault's biopolitics framework to explore human-nonhuman relations (Youatt 2008, Braverman 2015, Fletcher et al 2019) including biodiversity conservation (Biermann and Anderson 2017, Cavanagh 2018). The third section will discuss what these dynamics mean for biopolitics of conservation

Emerging technologies and the biopolitics of conservation
Biopolitics of biodiversity monitoring in the Atlantic Forest
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
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