Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
publishedVersion
Publication Date
1-2024
Abstract
A central theme of Singapore’s “City in Nature” vision is framed through biophilic urbanism, or efforts to harmonize biodiversity and urban development through built, social, and political design. The central discourses of Singapore’s biophilic urbanism have revolved around flora-centric paradigms, including habitat conservation, greening spaces, and access to natural capital. This paper detours from conventions of Singapore’s urban ecological futures and instead explores the governance of fauna co- existence in the city–state through the concept of “urban crittizenship.” Defined as a more-than-human denization framework that interrogates urban wildlife governance, urban crittizenship interrogates the politics of urban wildlife’s rights to the city. Drawing on interviews, publicly accessible data, and ethnographic findings with local governing actors and activists, I show that Singapore’s experience of urban fauna governance is framed through three categories (“resident,” “wildlife,” and “pest”) and that they inform how state and society mediate and manage coexistence with urban wildlife. These experiences are examined through the examples of otters, boars, and pigeons, respectively. In doing so, I present urban crittizenship as an inductive model of analyzing urban wildlife coexistence as primarily secured through infrastructural and political regime configurations that inform their crittizenship statuses. Any real shifts toward new forms of coexistence must therefore begin with actual transformations in these areas. I further iterate that using an urban crittizenship framework refines our understanding and application of biophilic urbanism as socio-political processes that influence already- existing urban wildlife coexistence, complementing existing analyses in urban ecology. In other words, there is a politics of biophilia that warrants a conversation, because biophilia is political.
Keywords
Biophilic urbanism, Human–animal interaction, Singapore, Urban coexistence, Urban ecology, Urban wildlife
Discipline
Asian Studies | Demography, Population, and Ecology | Urban Studies
Research Areas
Sociology
Publication
Anthrozoös
First Page
1
Last Page
17
ISSN
0892-7936
Identifier
10.1080/08927936.2024.2303229
Publisher
Routledge
Citation
WONG, George.(2024). Lion City zoopolis: Urban crittizenship in biophilic Singapore. Anthrozoös, , 1-17.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3921
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1080/08927936.2024.2303229
Included in
Asian Studies Commons, Demography, Population, and Ecology Commons, Urban Studies Commons