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SCHOOL OF HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
RESEARCH SEMINAR
SEMESTER TWO 2022
MONDAY 7TH NOVEMBER 2022
FROM 5:30PM

Location:
F10A Law Building Annex, Level 3, Seminar Room 342
Zoom:
https://uni-sydney.zoom.us/j/87929796938 
<https://uni-sydney.zoom.us/j/87929796938%20>

[https://mcusercontent.com/377ed99b00666e1febb7dbbc0/images/3ff22b5b-5028-42ad-de7d-aa1796fafbd1.jpg]
EMILY O'GORMAN (PhD)
Associate Professor, Macquarie University

WETLANDS AND GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS: MORE-THAN HUMAN HISTORIES

Abstract: Ecologists estimate that the most of the world’s wetlands have been 
lost since 1700, with these losses accelerating from 1900. Wetlands have been 
drained to prevent disease, encourage urban growth, and diverted to support 
intensive agriculture. This loss of wetlands has had a range of consequences, 
from reduced biodiversity to the erosion of cultural sites. Only in the 1960s 
and 1970s did “wetlands” become an international category and object of 
conservation amidst growing efforts in global environmental protection. This 
paper considers these contested wetland histories in more-than-human terms. It 
first discusses the approach of more-than-human histories in relation to 
wetlands in the Murray-Darling Basin, Australia. It then examines Australia’s 
involvement in international wetlands conservation. Here, changing 
understandings of transcontinental bird migrations, Pacific diplomacy, and 
ideas of habitats and habitat loss, converged to shape government scientists’ 
involvement in the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands of International Importance 
1971. This paper examines wetlands as sites defined by and laden with specific 
sets of values, which were shaped by particular expertise and relationships 
with certain animals and plants, and were deeply connected with Australasian 
and Pacific circulations.

Bio: Emily O’Gorman is an Associate Professor at Macquarie University. Her 
research is situated within environmental history, and the interdisciplinary 
environmental humanities, and is primarily concerned with contested knowledges 
within broader cultural framings of authority, expertise, and landscapes. This 
has been supported by nationally competitive research grants as well as a 
Carson Writing Fellowship at the Rachel Carson Center, LMU, Munich. She is the 
author of Flood Country: An Environmental History of the Murray-Darling Basin 
(2012) and Wetlands in a Dry Land: More-than-human Histories of Australia’s 
Murray-Darling Basin (University of Washington Press, 2021). She co-leads the 
Environmental Humanities research group at Macquarie University, was a founding 
Associate Editor of the journal Environmental Humanities (2012-2014) and a 
founding co-editor of the Living Lexicon in that journal (2014-2020). She is 
currently the Convenor of the Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand Environmental 
History Network.




WHEN:  MONDAY 7TH NOVEMBER 2022
START: 5.30PM
Location:
F10A Law Building Annex, Level 3, Seminar Room 342

Zoom:
https://uni-sydney.zoom.us/j/87929796938 
<https://uni-sydney.zoom.us/j/87929796938%20>

All Welcome | Registration not required | Free
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