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Dr Simona Capisani

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

The abstract below gives a quick overview of Simona Capisani’s new article, which explores how the idea of “livability” applies not just to humans, but to other living creatures as well.

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.

You can read the full article on the Biology & Philosophy website here:
Livability and non-human organisms | Biology & Philosophy | Springer Nature Link

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