Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781496230607 Academic Inspection Copy

Antarctic Cities

From Gateways to Global Custodians
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
Wild places and remote regions, once considered zones where people traveled as "explorers" or lived as peoples of the land, have come under increasing threat from human impact, including climate change. Amid the challenges of intensifying human activity, Antarctica is becoming an "anthropogenic landscape"--and the current governance system may be insufficient to meet the environmental protection obligations set out under the Madrid Protocol in 1991. Antarctic Cities considers the five urban centers of Cape Town, Christchurch, Hobart, Punta Arenas, and Ushuaia, which are internationally recognized as the most important gateway cities to the Antarctic polar community. All five cities have a well-documented Antarctic cultural heritage, boast significant transport logistics, tourism, and scientific infrastructure, and are investing significantly in public engagement with the South Polar region. The authors examine how, by taking advantage of their cultural, ecological, economic, and political ties with Antarctica, these cities are rethinking how to be more than primary entry and exit points for polar science programs, adventure tourism, or commercial fishing industries. Antarctic Cities is a detailed interpretative study of the many ways these gateway cities are engaging with Antarctica, reimagining its connections, and planning their urban futures, by looking south and at each other as a network of Antarctic custodial urban centers.
Juan Francisco Salazar is a professor of media and communication studies at the Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University. Paul James is a professor of globalization and cultural diversity at the Institute for Culture and Society at the University of Western Sydney. Elizabeth Leane is a professor of Antarctic studies at the University of Tasmania. Liam Magee is a professor of learning design and leadership at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
"As international diplomacy, science, and environmental protection and management shift from expected practices of the state to categories open for contestation and reversal, the subject of Antarctica and how to advocate for an unpeopled place is critically important. This is the only study of its kind, and it contributes to Antarctic cultural studies, polar studies, and environmental studies. Urban planners, science program officials, and Antarctic policymakers will be interested in this book alongside academic audiences."--Jessica O'Reilly, author of The Technocratic Antarctic: An Ethnography of Scientific Expertise and Environmental Governance
Google Preview content