Decolonizing Environmentalism: Alternative Visions and Practices of Environmental Action
Autor Prakash Kashwan, Aseem Hasnainen Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 ian 2025
The authors cast a critical eye on wealthy and influential environmental groups that committed to anti-racist strategies in the wake of the racial awakening of 2020. Yet, they continue to embrace false solutions like carbon markets and biodiversity offsets, which carry deeply racialized consequences. By tracing the roots of these misplaced priorities to detrimental modernity steeped in colonialism and capitalism, the authors call for transformational changes in human-nature relationships. They distil lessons from the divestment movement, which has questioned the fossil fuel industry's moral standing, and food sovereignty activists, who have mobilized global civil society to hold agribusiness corporations accountable.
Amidst calls for "apocalyptic optimism," Kashwan and Hasnain offer a radical vision grounded in intersectional ecofeminism, Indigenous sovereignty, and strategies honed in the trenches of transnational environmentalism. In these extraordinary times, Decolonizing Environmentalism invites readers to embark on a transformative journey to embrace anti-racist, emancipatory, and regenerative approaches to environmentalism.
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| Bloomsbury Publishing – 23 ian 2025 | 353.87 lei 43-57 zile |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350335479
ISBN-10: 1350335479
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 146 x 222 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350335479
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 146 x 222 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Chapter 1: Unpacking Mainstream Environmentalism: Heroic and Mundane
Chapter 2: Decolonizing Environmentalism: What do we mean? Why Now?
Chapter 3: Planet-Hacking Environmentalism in the Anthropocene
Chapter 4: Seductions of Sustainability in Contemporary Environmentalism
Chapter 5: How Not to Decolonize: Instrumentalizing Indigenous Rights and Wisdom
Chapter 6: Youth Climate Movements: Accomplishments, Challenges, and Transformations
Chapter 7: Forging Solidarities for Emancipatory and Regenerative Environmentalisms
Chapter 2: Decolonizing Environmentalism: What do we mean? Why Now?
Chapter 3: Planet-Hacking Environmentalism in the Anthropocene
Chapter 4: Seductions of Sustainability in Contemporary Environmentalism
Chapter 5: How Not to Decolonize: Instrumentalizing Indigenous Rights and Wisdom
Chapter 6: Youth Climate Movements: Accomplishments, Challenges, and Transformations
Chapter 7: Forging Solidarities for Emancipatory and Regenerative Environmentalisms
Recenzii
Decolonizing Environmentalism dismantles the assumptions of mainstream Western environmentalism, offering a powerful critique in clear and accessible language. It goes beyond critique, however, by providing a valuable roadmap for building more inclusive and equitable environmental movements.
Decolonizing Environmentalism is a thought-provoking and comprehensive exploration of the intricate relationship between the urgent issues of environmentalism, social justice, and climate change. Through a comprehensive and diverse array of sources, it skillfully navigates the historical, ethical, and contemporary dimensions of environmental movements, shedding light on the often overlooked perspectives of indigenous communities and marginalized groups. This book is an essential read for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the complexities of environmental issues and the imperative of inclusive, equitable approaches to address them.
Decolonizing Environmentalism is a much needed and timely analysis of the limitations of mainstream environmentalism and how these can be transcended. It makes a strong case for decolonisation by explaining how popular environmental and sustainability initiatives, including geo-engineering, market-based approaches, and nature conservation, have failed because they have reproduced the same colonial, capitalist, and modernist logics that have caused environmental crises in the first place. As the book suggests, it is high time that we abandon these initiatives in favour of transformative changes that center on justice and equity for humans and other species.
Questioning the Euro-American valorization of 'heroic', individual responsibility-focused environmentalism, Kashwan and Hasnain offer an incisive, critical, decolonial, history-conscious, and politically engaged way to address the root causes of our polycrisis through visions of a regenerative and emancipatory decolonial environmentalism.
Decolonizing Environmentalism is a groundbreaking reflection on the necessity of reimagining environmental and climate action to break free of problematic ideologies and intellectual strictures rooted in colonial pasts. The book deftly draws from different academic fields, movement histories, and contemporary discourses to demonstrate why we must build solidarities between environmentalism, climate change, economic and social justice, and self-determination of Indigenous and marginalized communities around the globe. The book accomplishes its aims in clear, accessible, and powerful prose rendering it an indispensable guide for helping to usher in regenerative environmental futures.
Decolonizing Environmentalism is a critical and timely contribution to environmental studies, offering a rigorous analysis of the limitations of mainstream environmentalism while proposing radical alternatives rooted in justice and equity . The book challenges readers to rethink the foundational assumptions of environmental discourse and to engage with environmental struggles in ways that are genuinely inclusive and transformative.
Decolonizing Environmentalism is a thought-provoking and comprehensive exploration of the intricate relationship between the urgent issues of environmentalism, social justice, and climate change. Through a comprehensive and diverse array of sources, it skillfully navigates the historical, ethical, and contemporary dimensions of environmental movements, shedding light on the often overlooked perspectives of indigenous communities and marginalized groups. This book is an essential read for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the complexities of environmental issues and the imperative of inclusive, equitable approaches to address them.
Decolonizing Environmentalism is a much needed and timely analysis of the limitations of mainstream environmentalism and how these can be transcended. It makes a strong case for decolonisation by explaining how popular environmental and sustainability initiatives, including geo-engineering, market-based approaches, and nature conservation, have failed because they have reproduced the same colonial, capitalist, and modernist logics that have caused environmental crises in the first place. As the book suggests, it is high time that we abandon these initiatives in favour of transformative changes that center on justice and equity for humans and other species.
Questioning the Euro-American valorization of 'heroic', individual responsibility-focused environmentalism, Kashwan and Hasnain offer an incisive, critical, decolonial, history-conscious, and politically engaged way to address the root causes of our polycrisis through visions of a regenerative and emancipatory decolonial environmentalism.
Decolonizing Environmentalism is a groundbreaking reflection on the necessity of reimagining environmental and climate action to break free of problematic ideologies and intellectual strictures rooted in colonial pasts. The book deftly draws from different academic fields, movement histories, and contemporary discourses to demonstrate why we must build solidarities between environmentalism, climate change, economic and social justice, and self-determination of Indigenous and marginalized communities around the globe. The book accomplishes its aims in clear, accessible, and powerful prose rendering it an indispensable guide for helping to usher in regenerative environmental futures.
Decolonizing Environmentalism is a critical and timely contribution to environmental studies, offering a rigorous analysis of the limitations of mainstream environmentalism while proposing radical alternatives rooted in justice and equity . The book challenges readers to rethink the foundational assumptions of environmental discourse and to engage with environmental struggles in ways that are genuinely inclusive and transformative.