From manstream measuring to multispecies sustainability? A gendered reading of bee‐ing sustainable

Davies, O. and Riach, K. (2019) From manstream measuring to multispecies sustainability? A gendered reading of bee‐ing sustainable. Gender, Work and Organization, 26(3), pp. 246-266. (doi: 10.1111/gwao.12245)

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Abstract

This article draws on an ethnography of bee‐work to explore how androcentrism is enacted and disrupted in environmental organizing practices. We first situate the study in recent debates surrounding sustainability, viewing this as one organizing project that informs the recent ‘Save the Bees’ discourse and initiatives proliferating the global North. Theoretically inspired by ideas from political ecology and feminist materialism, we suggest that dominant ‘bee‐saving’ practices are enacted through masculinist conceptions of ‘manstream’ measuring. Focusing on biosecurity inspections during one significant pollination event, we draw on three motifs to explore both the enactment and disruption of sanitized, linear and falsely bounded distinctions that often re/produce practices which have outcomes counter to their intended objectives. Reflecting on three field‐based moments — Pests, Protection and Pace — we consider the possibilities for an alternative modality of multispecies sustainability that is inspired by a new materialism agenda. This not only serves to dismantle inherent binaries through paying attention to the ontological muddling of species, but also helps to consider the productive relations that may emerge when we depart from masculinist modes of sustainable thinking in organizational and institutional settings.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Riach, Professor Kathleen
Authors: Davies, O., and Riach, K.
College/School:College of Social Sciences > Adam Smith Business School > Management
Journal Name:Gender, Work and Organization
Publisher:Wiley
ISSN:0968-6673
ISSN (Online):1468-0432
Published Online:30 April 2018

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