Dear MarMam Community,

On behalf of my co-authors, we are pleased to share our recent paper titled 
"Documenting the Endangered North Atlantic Right Whale: Policies, Conservation 
Efforts, and Stakeholders Depicted in Entangled and Last of the Right Whales. 
This article was recently published in the Journal of International Wildlife 
Law & Policy. Here is the link to the 
article<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13880292.2023.2294590>. If 
you do not have access to the Journal through your organization, you may 
contact me directly for a PDF copy.

Abstract: Wildlife documentaries are a form of environmental media widely used 
in public engagement around sustainability and conservation issues, including 
biodiversity loss. Two recently released wildlife documentaries, Entangled 
(2020) and Last of the Right Whales (2021), are the first to tell stories 
focused on the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale (NARW) through 
film, despite the species having been imperiled for more than a century and 
experts sounding the alarm about the population’s decline for decades. While 
whales are highly regarded worldwide and their conservation has strong public 
support, the NARW case study is a complicated one due not only to biological 
and ecological challenges, but also to sociopolitical ones. Without drastic 
policy actions and changes to industry practices throughout its migratory 
range, the NARW may disappear within decades, becoming the first great whale 
species to reach extinction since the industrial whaling era. In this article 
we address a gap in current environmental media and documentary studies by 
engaging critically with Entangled and Last of the Right Whales and considering 
them within the socioecological contexts they showcase and aim to influence. 
Our findings indicate that these two films share an important environmental 
problem with their viewers but fail to overcome some important pitfalls that 
limit the ability of environmental films to achieve collective action and 
policy change. We use this case study to highlight opportunities and challenges 
associated with wildlife documentaries more broadly, specifically, their role 
in biodiversity conservation in the Anthropocene. We conclude with 
opportunities for future interdisciplinary research and collaborative practice 
that can help wildlife films to achieve more than accolades for filmmakers and 
mere general awareness of conservation challenges.

Citation: Reamer, M., Vaughan, H., & Shriver-Rice, M. (2024). Documenting the 
Endangered North Atlantic Right Whale: Policies, Conservation Efforts, and 
Stakeholders Depicted in Entangled and Last of the Right Whales. Journal of 
International Wildlife Law & Policy, 26(4), 1–26. 
https://doi.org/10.1080/13880292.2023.2294590

All my best,

Marcus B. Reamer, MPS, MPA (he/him/his)
Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Environmental Science and Policy
Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science
ORCiD<https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4140-0989> | 
LinkedIn<http://linkedin.com/in/mreamer> | +1 305.496.4555

[cid:c84e8300-9d41-4c32-a7ca-91b37d36597a]<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13880292.2023.2294590>

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