These are my recommendations for revising the article: Queer ecology.

Copied content from Queer ecology; see that page's history for attribution.

Definition

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The term “queer ecology”[1] refers to a loose, interdisciplinary constellation of practices that aim, in different ways, to disrupt prevailing heterosexist discursive and institutional articulations of sexuality and nature, and also to reimagine evolutionary processes, ecological interactions, and environmental politics in light of queer theory. Blah blah blah[2] Drawing from traditions as diverse as evolutionary biology, LGBTTIQQ2SA (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, transsexual, intersex, queer, questioning, two-spirited, and allies) movements, and queer geography and history, feminist science studies, ecofeminism, and environmental justice, queer ecology currently highlights the complexity of contemporary biopolitics, draws important connections between the material and cultural dimensions of environmental issues, and insists on an articulatory practice in which sex and nature are understood in light of multiple trajectories of power and matter"[1]

  1. ^ a b S, Catriona; il; s. "Keywords for Environmental Studies". Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  2. ^ Krupar, Shiloh R. (2012-05-24). "Transnatural ethics: revisiting the nuclear cleanup of Rocky Flats, CO, through the queer ecology of Nuclia Waste:". cultural geographies. doi:10.1177/1474474011433756.