
Joe Harkness (Bloomsbury)
We begin with moth genitalia. Joe Harkness was planning to write a book about 鈥渘iche nature interests鈥: ecologists, naturalists and conservationists with obscure passions for woodlice, or taxidermy, or yes, the examination (for ID purposes) of moth genitals. Then a suggestion from an editor set him on a new track: might some of these niche nature interests intersect with neurodivergence?
Harkness had himself been diagnosed with ADHD not long before. It wasn鈥檛, he writes, 鈥渢he biggest shock鈥 to learn, on returning to his interviewees, that many of them had received an autism or ADHD diagnosis, or had been diagnosed with one of the conditions beginning with 鈥渄ys鈥 (dyslexia, dyspraxia, dyscalculia).
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What follows in Neurodivergent, By Nature: Why biodiversity needs neurodiversity is a timely and interesting study of the value and meaning of 鈥渘ature鈥 to neurodivergent personalities and a rigorous survey of how neurodiversity is accommodated in the UK鈥檚 conservation industry.
We quickly encounter a striking and unexpected contrast. On the one hand, Harkness and his interviewees characterise the wild outdoors as a 鈥渟afe space鈥, a 鈥渘on-judgmental鈥 place that can offer stimulation without overload, somewhere that (as one autistic National Trust ranger puts it) seems 鈥渁 more manageable, logical and simple place to be鈥. On the other, it soon becomes clear that most of Harkness鈥檚 subjects are making their living in an intensely competitive industry, where high barriers and low pay are the norm. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 gloss over the exploitation that so evidently occurs in this sector,鈥 says Harkness. And that鈥檚 even before neurodivergent conditions are factored in.
Pinning down precise definitions of neurodivergent experience is, of course, a hazardous and perhaps foolhardy enterprise. Harkness is happy to keep things open-ended. A key concern in his book is that the 鈥渦nique neurodivergent skillsets鈥 of many conservation workers go unrecognised and unused.
He singles out intense focus, heightened sensory awareness, pattern-spotting and 鈥渁 moral compass that only points in the direction of the natural world鈥. But he is aware of drawbacks, too: hyperfocus goes with unhelpful hyperfixation, thinking laterally with thinking too literally, and, while 鈥渨e might be amazing at analysing data, if you don鈥檛 understand my spreadsheet, you鈥檙e an idiot鈥.
Harkness also acknowledges a tension many neurodivergent conservationists will always have to negotiate: 鈥淲e鈥檇 rather spend our time with the thing that we most want to keep safe than the people who wreak havoc upon it. However, the paradox is鈥 we need to engage these people鈥 to stand any chance of making positive change happen.鈥
If the book seems to stray from its premise 鈥 as when Harkness engages with the issues faced by women, younger people and people from ethnic minority backgrounds 鈥 it is a salutary reminder that neurodiversity intersects with a host of social, economic, political and environmental concerns. Very little here is clear-cut.
Harkness is a chatty, enthusiastic guide to a field he knows well, and he speaks with a huge number of people, all with enlightening stories to tell. These can be inspiring, sometimes upsetting and often funny, though I would have liked to hear more in their own words.
If some of the personality is lost later, where Harkness breaks down the hiring policies and workplace culture of some conservation organisations from a neurodiversity viewpoint, it is still fascinating and necessary work. Our climate and eco-crises need all hands on deck.
Richard Smyth is a writer and a crossword compiler for New 杏吧原创
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