Abstract
Abstract In the last decade, in light of unexpected death and disappearance rates, pollinators (especially honey bees) have received increasing attention. This attention includes what Anderson (2010) refers to as anticipatory actions: efforts to predict, prepare for, and even preempt future threats. Research on anticipatory actions has tended to focus on regulatory and macro-political concerns; however, in this paper, how anticipatory actions are experienced by those involved provides orientation. Drawing on ethnographic and policy work on beekeeping biosecurity in Australia, the paper explores how beekeeping is being reconfigured in anticipation of the arrival of a particular agricultural pest: Varroa destructor. Australia is one of the few places that remains free of this parasite. Its impacts are expected to be catastrophic, and the anticipatory actions undertaken are extensive. Exploring how beekeepers are participating in and responding to Varroa's influence (even in its absence) adds depth to consideration of anticipatory action, as well as offering insights into how honey bee biosecurity efforts are not simply technical matters but world-making.
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