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      Conceptualising multispecies collaboration: Work, animal labour, and Nature‐based Solutions

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      Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Tracing the story of beaver restoration across California, this paper investigates the emerging discourse of ‘working with nature’ through the lens of animal work and labour, exploring possibilities for, multispecies collaboration. At the intersection of animal geographies, environmental anthropology, and geographies of conservation, this paper finds three concurrent modes of working with beaver: beaver as labourer, beaver as coworker, and beaver as community. Beaver as labourer emerges as a mode where beavers go from material resource to low‐wage labourer, their liveliness predicated on their ability to be working for humans. Beaver as coworker transitions beavers from labourers to workers, respected for their skills as ecosystem engineers to be working with. Beaver as community emerges as a mode in which beavers and humans live with each other as kin, amidst wider multispecies assemblages. This mode sets the foundation to theorise the concept of multispecies collaboration, a term often used in the literature without definition. This paper explores the concept through theories of animal work and labour, challenging the premise of work altogether, while situating multispecies collaboration as an in‐between, a both/and space of working and living with ‘nature’. This paper serves as an reflection on the ways in which humans ‘work with nature’, in a time where various nonhumans are being made to be ‘workers’. It presents and analyses these relations, ruminates on implications for governance of these multispecies spaces, and develops the concept of multispecies collaboration as a critical consideration for Nature‐based Solutions.

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          Staying with the Trouble

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            Come take a walk with me: the "go-along" interview as a novel method for studying the implications of place for health and well-being.

            This paper aims to serve as a four-part introductory primer on the "go-along" qualitative interview methodology for studying the health issues of neighborhood or local-area contexts. First, I describe the purpose and different types of implementation of go-alongs. Second, I discuss its advantages for studying how place may matter for health (particularly in terms of the participants) and how it may facilitate researchers' understandings of local knowledge as well as the social and physical context. Third, I consider the method's strengths and limitations for population health research on neighborhoods and local areas. Fourth and finally, I discuss how go-alongs may be used in tandem with other qualitative and quantitative approaches for multi-method research. Informing this discussion are my own experiences with a particular type of go-along interview-"walk-along" interviews-during a study of social capital in Milwaukee, Wisconsin neighborhoods.
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              The Mushroom at the End of the World

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers
                Trans Inst British Geog
                Wiley
                0020-2754
                1475-5661
                September 2023
                December 30 2022
                September 2023
                : 48
                : 3
                : 541-555
                Affiliations
                [1 ] School of Geography and the Environment University of Oxford Oxford UK
                Article
                10.1111/tran.12593
                d7fadace-1f2e-4031-bdc6-6cea03475b22
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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