Skip to product information
1 of 1

Valuing Nature at the Ends of the World

Regular price $35.00
Sale price $35.00 Regular price $35.00
Sale Sold out
Patrick M. Gallagher explores how Belize’s precarious coastal environment has become a site for a new kind of capitalist value production, in which landscapes and ecosystems derive worth from their...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 25 August 2026
View Product Details

Belize is often described as a “pristine” ecotourism destination with a landscape that is “naturally” valuable. Yet for much of the twentieth century, British Honduras—as the country was known under colonial rule—was seen as lacking value, an unprofitable backwater. Valuing Nature at the Ends of the World explores how Belize’s precarious coastal environment has become a site for a new kind of capitalist value production, in which landscapes and ecosystems derive worth from their vulnerability or looming destruction in the era of climate change.

Drawing on a decade of ethnographic research, Patrick M. Gallagher offers a critical account of market-oriented conservation in the Caribbean that ranges across everyday coastal life, emergent ecological science, and climate policy spaces. He shows how the long material and social histories of racialized colonialism shape the making of technocratic tools for valuing nature. Gallagher traces how new forms of capitalist value emerge from the interaction among colonial pasts, contemporary conservation practices, and vivid scenarios of imminent climate change–driven disaster and loss. He also examines how people and policymakers in Belize imagine and create new ways of life in a changing environment. Ethnographically grounded and rich in theoretical insight, this book illuminates how the Anthropocene environment, newly visible and valuable at the moment of its presumed disappearance, came into being in Belize and around the world.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $35.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Society and the Environment
Publication Date: 25 August 2026
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780231215671
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Cultural & Ethnic Studies / Caribbean & Latin American Studies, SCIENCE / Global Warming & Climate Change, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Environmental Policy, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social

How does the intense multiplicity that we sometimes call nature get assigned economic value amid efforts to save ‘it’? In this timely and sweeping ethnography, Gallagher shows how projects intended to make biodiversity loss visible can also efface their colonial and racialized histories. Valuing Nature at the Ends of the World is a book that shows how even some of the most creative ways to contend with ecological loss need to more clearly address the histories that produce the different crises we now call the Anthropocene.
— Nikhil Anand, author of Hydraulic City: Water and the Infrastructures of Citizenship in Mumbai
Patrick M. Gallagher is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Texas at San Antonio.