Configuring the field of global marine biodiversity conservation
Introduction: The article describes and analyzes the emergence of the field of global marine biodiversity conservation over the past fifteen years. We draw on collaborative research at international meetings, which we position as ‘field’ sites, places where diverse actors come together to negotiate the meaning and terms of global environmental governance and where that work is accessible and visible to researchers. Methods: Based on Collaborative Event Ethnography (CEE), a method developed to facilitate study of large meetings, we mobilize research from seven meetings since 2008 to describe the field of global marine biodiversity conservation, but more importantly to specifying how that field has been configured. Results: We identify practices of orchestration, narrative, performance, alliance, social objects, devices, and technologies, formal outcomes, and formal procedures, and their use at three phases of field configuration: building, framing, and bounding. Discussion: The results: 1) enhance our understanding of the role of international conferences in global environmental governance generally, and for marine biodiversity conservation specifically; 2) demonstrate the relevance of field and field configuration theory; 3) contribute to theory on institutional fields by specifying practices of field configuration.
Duke Scholars
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- 3708 Oceanography
- 3705 Geology
- 3103 Ecology
- 0602 Ecology
- 0405 Oceanography
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Related Subject Headings
- 3708 Oceanography
- 3705 Geology
- 3103 Ecology
- 0602 Ecology
- 0405 Oceanography