Seed banking as cryopower: A cryopolitical account of the work of the International Board of Plant Genetic Resources, 1973–1984
Seed banking as cryopower: A cryopolitical account of the work of the International Board of Plant Genetic Resources, 1973–1984
The implications of freezing seeds to conserve genes statically and for the long term are complex and deserve further reflection to appreciate seed banking as an attempt to detach seeds from their life cycle. Here, I use a cryopolitical framework to explore this in the context of the activities of the International Board of Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR) between 1973 and 1984. I suggest that the emergence of seed banks is a shift toward a cryopower mode of governance, where technoscientific intervention in the biology of seeds was presented as a means to manage the survival of seeds. The project of ex situ conservation is a socio‐technical effort by international institutions such as IBPGR and a variety of institutions with seed repositories. In creating a coldscape, they sought to make genetic resources into frozen seeds that were stable and mobile, not only across space but, importantly, over time. Consequently, our interpretations of seed banks as sites of geopolitical significance in the controversies over access to seeds can be complemented by considering their biopolitical importance as interventions that extend the power of IBPGR and other institutions toward plant life, and the future.
seed banks, cryopolitics, crop genetic resources, history of science, conservation
76-86
Peres, Sara
d6b4ed3e-254d-4ff8-943b-4cc518caa20d
December 2019
Peres, Sara
d6b4ed3e-254d-4ff8-943b-4cc518caa20d
Peres, Sara
(2019)
Seed banking as cryopower: A cryopolitical account of the work of the International Board of Plant Genetic Resources, 1973–1984.
Culture, Agriculture, Food and Environment, 41 (2), .
(doi:10.1111/cuag.12236).
Abstract
The implications of freezing seeds to conserve genes statically and for the long term are complex and deserve further reflection to appreciate seed banking as an attempt to detach seeds from their life cycle. Here, I use a cryopolitical framework to explore this in the context of the activities of the International Board of Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR) between 1973 and 1984. I suggest that the emergence of seed banks is a shift toward a cryopower mode of governance, where technoscientific intervention in the biology of seeds was presented as a means to manage the survival of seeds. The project of ex situ conservation is a socio‐technical effort by international institutions such as IBPGR and a variety of institutions with seed repositories. In creating a coldscape, they sought to make genetic resources into frozen seeds that were stable and mobile, not only across space but, importantly, over time. Consequently, our interpretations of seed banks as sites of geopolitical significance in the controversies over access to seeds can be complemented by considering their biopolitical importance as interventions that extend the power of IBPGR and other institutions toward plant life, and the future.
Text
Peres-2019-Culture,_Agriculture,_Food_and_Environment
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e-pub ahead of print date: 26 November 2019
Published date: December 2019
Keywords:
seed banks, cryopolitics, crop genetic resources, history of science, conservation
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Local EPrints ID: 437257
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437257
ISSN: 2153-9561
PURE UUID: 0ec4a296-8706-48d6-96fa-3242a2e6bce0
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Date deposited: 22 Jan 2020 17:33
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 06:06
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