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Feeding extinction: navigating the metonyms and misanthropy of palm oil boycotts

Feeding extinction: navigating the metonyms and misanthropy of palm oil boycotts
Feeding extinction: navigating the metonyms and misanthropy of palm oil boycotts
Among UK-based orangutan conservation supporters, palm oil consumption boycotts are widespread, due to the ecological impacts of oil palm cultivation on orangutan habitat. Yet these boycotts are largely at odds with the stances of orangutan charities. Drawing on interviews with orangutan supporters, this article explores why some Global North consumers are so consumed by palm oil. Palm oil is viewed by orangutan supporters as insidious, invasive and cheap, and forces a bodily complicity with orangutan suffering. It is mobilized as a metonym for human greed and capitalist destruction. This metonymic relationship mirrors broader Anthropocentric framings of human-nature relations, which emphasize humanity as a universal actor. Yet the practices of 'species guilt' associated with these framings largely mitigate against a decolonizing model of conservation, as they have the potential to deny agency to workers and villagers enmeshed within the oil palm economy. Despite these unpromising circumstances, this article explores the unintended value of palm oil boycotts in terms of agency and ecological consciousness and addresses the potential to align such boycotts with a decolonial analysis, through centering the human dimensions of orangutan conservation.
1073-0451
928–944
Fair, Hannah
ac8ce812-836e-4032-900e-b767a775bac1
Fair, Hannah
ac8ce812-836e-4032-900e-b767a775bac1

Fair, Hannah (2021) Feeding extinction: navigating the metonyms and misanthropy of palm oil boycotts. Journal of Political Ecology, 28 (1), 928–944. (doi:10.2458/jpe.3001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Among UK-based orangutan conservation supporters, palm oil consumption boycotts are widespread, due to the ecological impacts of oil palm cultivation on orangutan habitat. Yet these boycotts are largely at odds with the stances of orangutan charities. Drawing on interviews with orangutan supporters, this article explores why some Global North consumers are so consumed by palm oil. Palm oil is viewed by orangutan supporters as insidious, invasive and cheap, and forces a bodily complicity with orangutan suffering. It is mobilized as a metonym for human greed and capitalist destruction. This metonymic relationship mirrors broader Anthropocentric framings of human-nature relations, which emphasize humanity as a universal actor. Yet the practices of 'species guilt' associated with these framings largely mitigate against a decolonizing model of conservation, as they have the potential to deny agency to workers and villagers enmeshed within the oil palm economy. Despite these unpromising circumstances, this article explores the unintended value of palm oil boycotts in terms of agency and ecological consciousness and addresses the potential to align such boycotts with a decolonial analysis, through centering the human dimensions of orangutan conservation.

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Fair 2021 JPE Accepted Manuscript - Accepted Manuscript
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Published date: 3 September 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494763
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494763
ISSN: 1073-0451
PURE UUID: d09bf3e2-8f21-4c74-8d5d-495e94391fce
ORCID for Hannah Fair: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1758-778X

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Date deposited: 15 Oct 2024 16:43
Last modified: 16 Oct 2024 02:15

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Author: Hannah Fair ORCID iD

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