Irus Braverman

"[1] Her work explores the tensions between governance and natural and unnatural environments, including zoos, public toilets, and tree landscapes.

[5] Donna Haraway calls Zooland, "Beautifully written, finely researched, [and] astutely argued, .

offer[ing] a wealth of stories, data, and views to understand the potent work of zoos and their life-propagating messiness, astonishing technologies, and detailed ordering of their captive subjects deemed wild.

"[6] Stephen Cave at Financial Times notes Zooland "illustrates how there is nothing natural about the lives of zoo animals.

[16] Recent essays include "Wild Legalities: Animals and Settler Colonialism in Palestine/Israel" in PoLAR (2021),[17] and "Environmental justice, settler colonialism, and more-than-humans in the occupied West Bank: An introduction" for a special issue of Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space (2021), "provid[ing] a first-of-its kind attempt to examine environmental injustices in the occupied West Bank through interdisciplinary perspectives, pointing to the broader settler colonial and neoliberal contexts within which they occur and to their more-than-human implications.