Amy D. Propen is an associate professor of writing at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and author of Visualizing Posthuman Conservation in the Age of the Anthropocene.
Psychologytoday Article “In today’s increasingly human-dominated world, nonhumans need all the help they can get. They deserve safe areas in which to travel about, and human-free corridors are the least we can do for them to have better lives and to enjoy the freedoms these areas offer. Amy Propen carefully explains why providing corridors is the compassionate and empathic thing to do and why we must do all we can to offer these ‘luxuries’ during the rage of humanity.” — Marc Bekoff, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals: A Leading Scientist Explores Animal Joy, Sorrow, and Empathy—and Why They Matter “In these times of climate disruption and biodiversity collapse, it can be challenging to hold hope and find solutions. A paradigm shift is needed in conservation, both scientifically and socially. Amy Propen details in this excellent new book how the growing movement around wildlife corridors offers a way forward. Her call for a new approach that weaves ecological restoration with a ‘conservation practice grounded in an ethic of care and empathy’ is both welcome and essential. As she writes here, rethinking our human spaces and how they can accommodate—rather than banish—wildlife is critical to the future of the wild world.” — Beth Pratt, Founder and Executive Director, The Wildlife Crossing Fund. “In this timely contribution, Propen draws together recent propositions from the diverse fields of environmental philosophy, animal studies, and indigenous worldviews, with extensive empirical research on a range of actually existing, diversely defined wildlife corridors. The resulting text is a hopeful one, showing readers the promise of carefully constructed wildlife corridors for meeting the challenges of holding space open for wildlife to survive and even, perhaps, thrive in times of ecological crisis.” — Dr. Aurora Fredriksen, Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, The University of Manchester.