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Christina Dunbar-Hester

    Christina Dunbar-Hester est une auteure dont les œuvres explorent les liens complexes entre technologie, activisme et société. Son écriture se penche souvent sur la manière dont les groupes marginalisés exploitent les outils de communication pour faire avancer leurs causes et susciter des changements politiques. Les recherches de Dunbar-Hester examinent de manière critique la dynamique des mouvements de base et leur utilisation des médias, offrant des perspectives perspicaces sur le pouvoir de la communication décentralisée. Ses analyses constituent une lentille précieuse pour comprendre l'impact et le potentiel des stratégies de communication non conventionnelles dans la formation du discours public.

    Oil Beach
    • "In this engaging interdisciplinary investigation, Christina Dunbar-Hester, a leading scholar in the area of democratic control of technologies, focuses on the relationships between commerce, environment, and nonhuman life forms in San Pedro Bay, which houses the contiguous ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles. The harbor is a heavily industrialized area built atop a land- and waterscape that is important for wildlife, containing estuarial wetlands, the LA river mouth, and a marine ecology where colder and warmer Pacific Ocean waters meet. This is a unique spot for industry too--this port complex is amongst the top-ten biggest container ports in the world, and the harbor is also home to major oil operations. Dunbar-Hester, a professor of Science & Technology Studies and Communication at the University of Southern California, centers her account on multispecies life in the period of about 1960 to the present, which coincides with the era of modern environmental regulation in the United States. Focusing on cetaceans, bananas, sea birds, and otters whose lives are intertwined with the vitality of the port complex itself, Dunbar--Hester reveals how logistics infrastructure destroys ecologies as it circulates goods and capital--and helps readers to consider a future where the accumulation of life and the accumulation of capital are not in violent tension."

      Oil Beach