Simona Capisani Publishes Lead-Authored Article on Livability and Non-Human Organisms in Biology & Philosophy
Simona Capisani is lead author of an article published this month in the journal Biology & Philosophy. Livability and non-human organisms | Biology & Philosophy | Springer Nature Link
Abstract: In a human changed world, many non-human organisms face a host of challenges related to their ability to migrate or remain in place. In this paper the authors argue for a right to a livable locality for non-human organisms further developing and applying arguments for a right to livability in the context of human climate migration. Th authors e demonstrate that non-human organisms can be understood as a type of by-catch within the territorial net this social practice casts. Incorporating a right to a livable locality of non-human organisms into conservation practice is advantageous because it frees conservation from a dominant historical and normative evaluative scheme—in situ conservation. In a changing and warmer world, an over emphasis on in situ conservation makes conservation success difficult to achieve. A shift to livability considerations in conservation can guide normative evaluation in emergent conservation paradoxes and problems that arise due to environmental and climatic change.
Livability and non-human organisms | Biology & Philosophy | Springer Nature Link
Find out more
- Learn more about Dr Simona Capisani
- Our Department of Philosophy is ranked 31st in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2025. Visit our Philosophy webpages for more information on our undergraduate and postgraduate programmes.
- Discover more about Transformative Humanities at Durham University.