Rewilding: Difference between revisions
(Created page with " =Description= Maria Farrell and Robin Berjon; "Rewilding “aims to restore healthy ecosystems by creating wild, biodiverse spaces,” [according](https://www.iucn.org/resources/issues-brief/benefits-and-risks-rewilding) to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. More ambitious and risk-tolerant than traditional conservation, it targets entire ecosystems to make space for complex food webs and the emergence of unexpected interspecies relations. It’s less...") |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 05:22, 26 June 2024
Description
Maria Farrell and Robin Berjon;
"Rewilding “aims to restore healthy ecosystems by creating wild, biodiverse spaces,” [according](https://www.iucn.org/resources/issues-brief/benefits-and-risks-rewilding) to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. More ambitious and risk-tolerant than traditional conservation, it targets entire ecosystems to make space for complex food webs and the emergence of unexpected interspecies relations. It’s less interested in saving specific endangered species. Individual species are just ecosystem components, and focusing on components loses sight of the whole. Ecosystems flourish through multiple points of contact between their many elements, just like computer networks. And like in computer networks, ecosystem interactions are multifaceted and generative.
Rewilding has much to offer people who care about the internet. As Paul Jepson and Cain Blythe wrote in [their book](https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262046763/rewilding/) “Rewilding: The Radical New Science of Ecological Recovery,” rewilding pays attention “to the emergent properties of interactions between ‘things’ in ecosystems … a move from linear to systems thinking.”
It’s a fundamentally cheerful and workmanlike approach to what can seem insoluble. It doesn’t micromanage. It creates room for “ecological processes [that] foster complex and self-organizing ecosystems.” Rewilding puts into practice what every good manager knows: Hire the best people you can, provide what they need to thrive, then get out of the way. It’s the opposite of command and control.
“The complex web of human interactions that thrived on the internet’s initial technological diversity is now corralled into globe-spanning data-extraction engines making huge fortunes for a tiny few.”
[Facebook](https://www.noemamag.com/#facebook) [Twitter](https://www.noemamag.com/#twitter) [Email](https://www.noemamag.com/#email)
Rewilding the internet is more than a metaphor. It’s a framework and plan. It gives us fresh eyes for the wicked problem of extraction and control, and new means and allies to fix it. It recognizes that ending internet monopolies isn’t just an intellectual problem. It’s an emotional one. It answers questions like: How do we keep going when the monopolies have more money and power? How do we act collectively when they suborn our community spaces, funding and networks? And how do we communicate to our allies what fixing it will look and feel like?
Rewilding is a positive vision for the networks we want to live inside, and a shared story for how we get there. It grafts a new tree onto technology’s tired old stock."
(https://digicnx.notion.site/We-Need-To-Rewild-The-Internet-f824d179c5d445489edd74533e11f65d)