Florence Durney

Postdoctoral Fellow - Japan Studies
Image of Florence Durney
Norwegian version of this page
Phone +47 22855589
Username
Visiting address P.A Munchs hus Niels Henrik Abels vei 36 0371 Oslo
Postal address Postboks 1010 Blindern 0315 Oslo
Other affiliations Environmental Humanities

Academic Interests

  • Environmental Anthropology

  • Oceans and Climate Change

  • Local and Traditional Ecological Knowledge Systems

  • Commodities, Consumption, and Food

  • Southeast Asia and the Pacific

  • Conservation and Common Pool Resources

Background

Florence Durney is an cultural anthropologist whose broad-scale research interests center on the relationships of human societies and their environments. The majority of her work has focused on humans and the marine environment, and the ways in which that relationship is differentially understood and put in practice around harvest and management, with a regional focus in Southeast Asia. As a postdoc with the ERC funded Whales of Power lab, her current project focuses on the last active community of traditional marine hunters and whalers in eastern Indonesia, and their experiences negotiating cosmology, hunting, and identity in a time of large-scale social and environmental change.

Before joining her team at IKOS, Durney completed a PhD at University of Arizona in 2019, where she also lectured in anthropology. She has also worked as a contracted researcher and research assistant on projects across the social and natural sciences including at the University of Arizona, the American Museum of Natural History, the Wildlife Conservation Society, and beyond.

Awards

  • Fulbright Fellow 2016-2017

  • P.E.O. Scholar 2017-2018

Selected Publications

Paige West, John Aini, Yolarnie Amepou, Jonathan Booth, Florence Durney, Simon Foale, Jeff Kinch, Patrick Nason, and Catherine Wahlen. (In press). "Marine Conservation in the Bismark Archipelago". In Marine Fauna and Flora of the Bismark Sea edited by Philippe Bouchet, Claude Payri, Romain Sabroux, and Sarah Samadi. French Museum of Natural History.
 

Durney, Florence. 2020. Appropriate Targets: Global patterns in interactions and conflicts around cetaceans, management, and traditional marine hunting communities. Environment and Society (7).

Lansing, J. Stephen and Florence Durney. 2013. Irrigation Societies. In The International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences. Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes, eds. Elsevier. Available Online.

Education

  • Ph.D. - University of Arizona 2019
  • M.A. - University of Arizona 2014
  • B.A. - Barnard College, Columbia University 2009

 

Tags: miljøhumaniora, environmental humanities, Environment, Anthropology, Ocean studies
Published Dec. 16, 2019 9:55 AM - Last modified Sep. 2, 2022 3:15 PM