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E-raamat: History of Environmental Degradation in Mar Menor: A Case Study

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by (Universidad De Murcia, Spain)
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"This book offers a multidisciplinary analysis of the degradation process of an ecosystem, drawing upon the Mar Menor as a case study to highlight the damage human pressure causes to the environment. All ecosystems change over time, although in some cases, this variation is more dynamic and evident. The Mar Menor is a clear example of this 'ecological transition', as it is the largest coastal lagoon in the western Mediterranean and the first ecosystem in Europe to be granted legal personhood rights. Thisbook provides an extensive overview of the history of its environmental degradation over the past 100 years, highlighting the subsequent succession of environmental crises including phytoplankton explosions, the disappearance of large areas of submerged meadows due to eutrophication, and episodes of mass mortality of aquatic fauna. Split into three sections to reflect thematic blocks, the book begins with a comprehensive description of the Mar Menor and its marine ecosystems, emphasising its ecological value and unique space in Spain and Europe. It discusses intensive and globalised agriculture, surrounding agro-export, and the laws that legislate it. In the second part, the book draws on a series of cultural concepts, theoretical frameworks, and participatory arts-based research to enrich our understanding of the environment from multiple perspectives. Finally, in the third part, the book uses analysis gathered from the Mar Menor case study to discuss wider conclusions about the ways in which we can begin to undo our damage to the environment and restore ecosystems. The book will be useful for students, academics and researchers interested in environmental justice, environmental history and anthropology, sustainable development, and environmental studies more broadly"--

This book offers a multidisciplinary analysis of the degradation process of an ecosystem, drawing upon the Mar Menor as a case study to highlight the damage human pressure causes to the environment.



This book offers a multidisciplinary analysis of the degradation process of an ecosystem, drawing upon the Mar Menor as a case study to highlight the damage human pressure causes to the environment.

All ecosystems change over time, although in some cases, this variation is more dynamic and evident. The Mar Menor is a clear example of this “ecological transition”, as it is the largest coastal lagoon in the western Mediterranean and the first ecosystem in Europe to be granted legal personhood rights. This book provides an extensive overview of the history of its environmental degradation over the past 100 years, highlighting the subsequent succession of environmental crises including phytoplankton explosions, the disappearance of large areas of submerged meadows due to eutrophication, and episodes of mass mortality of aquatic fauna. Split into three sections to reflect thematic blocks, the book begins with a comprehensive description of the Mar Menor and its marine ecosystems, emphasizing its ecological value and unique space in Spain and Europe. It discusses intensive and globalized agriculture, surrounding agro-export, and the laws that legislate it. In the second part, the book draws on a series of cultural concepts, theoretical frameworks, and participatory arts-based research to enrich our understanding of the environment from multiple perspectives. Finally, in the third part, the book uses analysis gathered from the Mar Menor case study to discuss wider conclusions about the ways in which we can begin to undo our damage to the environment and restore ecosystems.

This book will be useful for students, academics, and researchers interested in environmental justice, environmental history and anthropology, sustainable development, and environmental studies more broadly.

List of contributors

Foreword

Introduction

1 The Mar Menor the transition of an ecosystem over time (its crises in the
last 200 years)

2 Ecosystems and biodiversity in the frontiers of the Mar Menor Lagoon: birds
as alert bioindicators of environmental change

3 Agrarian reason, deep histories and environmental destruction in the Campo
de CartagenaMar Menor: a Gramscian worldecology perspective

4 The ecological degradation of the Mar Menor. Power, science and deep
stories in Global agriculture

5 Impacts of mining in the Sierra Minera on the Mar Menor lagoon

6 Cultural landscapes deterioration as losing ones aesthetic environment:
the case of Mar Menor

7 Monstrous lagoon: creatures of art and science in the Mar Menor

8 A citizen assembly for transitioning the Mar Menor?

9 The rights of Nature and the case of the Mar Menor. Implementation of Law
19/2022 of 30 September and enforcement in the judicial sphere

10 The Mar Menor (Spain) and incipient European regulations: from ecological
restoration to agricultural flexibility

11 La Manga del Mar Menor. Architecture for environmental colonisation

12 The assembly of the gaze: composing wetlands in a glocal world

13 Thick Presents. Stories for an ecosocial transition

14 Capital against nature: accumulation by dispossession and externalization
in the Mar Menor

15 Minor emotions: how to live in a damaged environment

Index
Juan Manuel Zaragoza is Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Murcia (Spain). From 2013 to 2015, he was a Marie Curie Research Fellow at the Centre for the History of the Emotions at Queen Mary University of London, and from 2015 to 2016 a BBVA Foundation Leonardo Fellow. His research has focused on the history of experience and emotions, specifically around the experiences of discomfort and wellbeing. He is PI of the project Climate crisis, mental health and wellbeing in the Anthropocene and Founding Director of the research collective ehCOLAB (https://www.um.es/ehcolab/) interested in the development of the blue humanities.

David Soto Carrasco is Full Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Murcia and Head of the Department of Philosophy at the same university. He has also been Full Professor at the Universidad del Pacífico in Ecuador. His work focuses on the study of the philosophical and political dimensions of the crisis of the 1930s and 1970s, especially in Spain and Latin America. He has also worked on environmental ethics and environmental public policies in the Southeast Pacific, editing five collective books with the Universidad del Pacífico, the last one entitled La Declaración de Santiago de 1952: una alianza del Pacífico Sudeste sobre políticas marítimas y ambientales. Some of his most recent publications are Filosofía política y ética: claves conceptuales para comprender el presente; Políticas del terror: subjetividad neoliberal y populismo autoritario, en: Turpín Saorín, J. (ed.). Antropología en devenir político (2023).

Malena Canteros graduated in Philosophy from the University of Murcia (Spain). She has completed a Masters degree in Philosophy Research with a specialization in Contemporary Aesthetics, as well as another Masters degree in Teacher Training, both at the University of Murcia. Her current area of interest is the relationship between climate change and mental health through a gender perspective.