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Environment in Context / Wetlands and the Moral Ecologies of Infrastructure in Turkey

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Environment in Context
Wetlands and the Moral Ecologies of Infrastructure in Turkey
{{langos=='en'?('20/11/2020' | todate):('20/11/2020' | artodate)}} - Issue 8.1

Huma Gupta and Camille Cole speak with Dr. Caterina Scaramelli about Turkey’s wetland ecosystems. Scaramelli unpacks how many different shallow water ecosystems are materially and discursively produced into a flattened category called 'wetlands'.

References:
References
1. Caterina Scaramelli, The Lost Wetlands of TurkeyMERIP, 2020.
2. Caterina Scaramelli, The Delta is Dead: Moral Ecologies of Infrastructure in Turkey, Cultural Anthropology, 2019.

Guests

Caterina Scaramelli
Caterina Scaramelli

Research Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Earth and Environment at Boston University

Caterina Scaramelli is the Research Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Earth and Environment at Boston University. Her research focuses on the Anthropology of Environment, Science and Infrastructure in Turkey. Her research centers on mutual constitutions of ecologies, scientific expertise, and infrastructures as conduits for people’s moral claims about human and non-human livelihoods. Her book How to Make a Wetland: Water and Moral Ecology in Turkey is published by Stanford University Press and will be available in March 2021.
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