Imagination and Environmental Political Thought

Imagination and Environmental Political Thought
Author: Joshua J. Bowman
Publsiher: Lexington Books
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2018-03-16
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781498559034

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This book explores and evaluates Henry David Thoreau’s political thought through the lens of a theory of imagination and considers his legacy for later environmental thought. This book will interest anyone curious about Thoreau’s relationship to environmentalism and the intersection of environmental humanities and politics.

Explorations in Environmental Political Theory

Explorations in Environmental Political Theory
Author: Joel Jay Kassiola
Publsiher: M.E. Sharpe
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2003
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0765610523

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The contributors to this volume focus on the political and value issues that, in their shared view, underlie the global environmental crisis facing us today. They argue that only by transforming our dominant values, social institutions, and "modern" way of living will we be able to avoid ultimate ecological disaster. Their call for the recognition of limits is, paradoxically, revolutionary in the context of postmodern society, but the contributors do not consider their views naive or utopian

Political Nature

Political Nature
Author: John M. Meyer
Publsiher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2001-07-20
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0262263718

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Concern over environmental problems is prompting us to reexamine established thinking about society and politics. The challenge is to find a way for the public's concern for the environment to become more integral to social, economic, and political decision making. Two interpretations have dominated Western portrayals of the nature-politics relationship, what John Meyer calls the dualist and the derivative. The dualist account holds that politics—and human culture in general—is completely separate from nature. The derivative account views Western political thought as derived from conceptions of nature, whether Aristotelian teleology, the clocklike mechanism of early modern science, or Darwinian selection. Meyer examines the nature-politics relationship in the writings of two of its most pivotal theorists, Aristotle and Thomas Hobbes, and of contemporary environmentalist thinkers. He concludes that we must overcome the limitations of both the dualist and the derivative interpretations if we are to understand the relationship between nature and politics. Human thought and action, says Meyer, should be considered neither superior nor subservient to the nonhuman natural world, but interdependent with it. In the final chapter, he shows how struggles over toxic waste dumps in poor neighborhoods, land use in the American West, and rainforest protection in the Amazon illustrate this relationship and point toward an environmental politics that recognizes the experience of place as central.

Nature Action and the Future

Nature  Action and the Future
Author: Katrina Forrester,Sophie Smith
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 253
Release: 2018-01-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107199286

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Leading scholars of political thought demonstrate how the history of political ideas makes sense of environmental politics and climate change.

Culture Environment and Ecopolitics

Culture  Environment and Ecopolitics
Author: Nick Heffernan,David A. Wragg
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2020-05-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781527551329

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Culture, Environment and Ecopolitics brings together a series of new reflections on historical and current ecological and environmental predicaments. By way of critical interventions in environmental thought, and through engagements with literary, visual, architectural, philosophical, and more general cultural studies scholarship, this collection of essays by an international panel of writers breaks new interpretative ground. While techno-science has in some quarters been elevated to a master discourse of humanity’s salvation, charged with providing a magical ‘fix’ for planetary ecological dilemmas, the focus of our volume is on the importance of cultural reflection for bringing matters of local and global import to light. Moving from the abstractions of eco-critical utopianisms to the concrete identity of the land in the poetry of John Clare, from British Petroleum’s attempts to re-brand climate change to examples of eco-architecture, and much more besides, these essays exemplify ways in which eco-political thought and practice might now be theorized. The collection is framed by a substantial editors’ introduction which offers but one contextualization of the ideas and critical trajectories that follow. Culture, Environment and Ecopolitics will allow readers to discover original intersections and argumentative cross-references across contested terrains in a world increasingly troubled by ecological crises.

Green Political Thought

Green Political Thought
Author: Andrew Dobson
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 247
Release: 2012-10-02
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781134597130

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Andrew Dobson's highly acclaimed introduction to green political thought is now available in a new edition. It has been fully revised and updated to take into account the areas that have grown in importance since the last edition was published. The third edition includes: * a comparison of ecologism with other principal modern ideologies, such as liberalism, conservatism, fascism, socialism, feminism and anarchism * an assessment of the relationship between green thinking and democracy, justice and citizenship * an exploration of 'sustainable development' addressing the fundamental question of 'what to sustain?' * real environmental problems and how green thinking relates to them.

Environmentalism and Political Theory

Environmentalism and Political Theory
Author: Robyn Eckersley
Publsiher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 310
Release: 1992-01-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0791410137

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This book provides the most detailed and comprehensive examination to date of the impact of environmentalism upon contemporary political thought. It sets out to disentangle the various strands of Green political thought and explain their relationship to the major Western political traditions. Environmentalism and Political Theory represents the consolidation of a new field of political inquiry that is destined to become an increasingly important component of political studies and political reporting worldwide. An interdisciplinary study that builds bridges between environmental philosophy, ecological thought, and political inquiry, this book employs a range of new insights from environmental philosophy to outline a particular Green political perspective.

After Nature

After Nature
Author: Jedediah Purdy
Publsiher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 337
Release: 2015-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780674368224

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Nature no longer exists apart from humanity. The world we will inhabit is the one we have made. Geologists call this epoch the Anthropocene, Age of Humans. The facts of the Anthropocene are scientific—emissions, pollens, extinctions—but its shape and meaning are questions for politics. Jedediah Purdy develops a politics for this post-natural world.