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British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.

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Conservation Land Management (CLM) is a quarterly magazine that is widely regarded as essential reading for all who are involved in land management for nature conservation, across the British Isles. CLM includes long-form articles, events listings, publication reviews, new product information and updates, reports of conferences and letters.

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Cryopolitics: Frozen Life in a Melting World

By: Joanna Radin(Editor), Emma Kowal(Editor)
376 pages, 26 b/w illustrations
Publisher: MIT Press
Cryopolitics: Frozen Life in a Melting World
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  • Cryopolitics: Frozen Life in a Melting World ISBN: 9780262035859 Hardback Mar 2017 Out of stock with supplier: order now to get this when available
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About this book

As the planet warms and the polar ice caps melt, naturally occurring cold is a resource of growing scarcity. At the same time, energy-intensive cooling technologies are widely used as a means of preservation. Technologies of cryopreservation support global food chains, seed and blood banks, reproductive medicine, and even the preservation of cores of glacial ice used to study climate change. In many cases, these practices of freezing life are an attempt to cheat death. Cryopreservation has contributed to the transformation of markets, regimes of governance and ethics, and the very relationship between life and death. In Cryopolitics, experts from anthropology, history of science, environmental humanities, and indigenous studies make clear the political and cultural consequences of extending life and deferring death by technoscientific means.

The contributors examine how and why low temperatures have been harnessed to defer individual death through freezing whole human bodies; to defer nonhuman species death by freezing tissue from endangered animals; to defer racial death by preserving biospecimens from indigenous people; and to defer large-scale human death through pandemic preparedness. The cryopolitical lens, emphasizing the roles of temperature and time, provokes new and important questions about living and dying in the twenty-first century.

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Biography

Joanna Radin is Assistant Professor in the Program in History of Science and Medicine at Yale University. Emma Kowal is Professor of Anthropology at Deakin University, Melbourne.


Contributors:
- Warwick Anderson
- Michael Bravo
- Jonny Bunning
- Matthew Chrulew
- Soraya de Chadarevian
- Alexander Friedrich
- Klaus Hoeyer
- Frédéric Keck
- Eben Kirksey
- Emma Kowal
- Joanna Radin
- Deborah Bird Rose
- Kim TallBear
- Charis Thompson
- David Turnbull
- Thom van Dooren
- Rebecca J. H. Woods

By: Joanna Radin(Editor), Emma Kowal(Editor)
376 pages, 26 b/w illustrations
Publisher: MIT Press
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