Decolonizing Environmentalism

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Recent debates emphasize the urgency of making environmental movements more inclusive, yet they do so without deeper scrutiny of the core tenets of environmentalism. Despite efforts by some groups, there is little acknowledgment of the continuing failure of the movement in addressing environmental injustices experienced by racial minorities. Decolonizing Environmentalism makes visible the simplifications and erasures of mainstream environmental movements, while reimagining our collective commitment to environmental stewardship in a way that builds on the knowledge and praxis of indigenous people, racial minorities, and rural communities.The authors deconstruct popular ideas, such as ''green consumption'' and ''sustainable development'' to show how these concepts rest on misleading assumptions which are based on colonial conceptualizations of conquering nature and European Modernity''s view of there being a fundamental separation between nature and society. The authors showcase alternative imaginations of environmentalism founded on materialist environmentalism that draws on indigenous living traditions of nature-society integration, with insights from contemporary movements such as The La Via Campesina Movement for Food Sovereignty, grassroots movements in Puerto Rico in response to Hurricane Maria, and the Fossil Free Movement among others.>

Vorwort
Explores the colonial European history of mainstream environmentalism and offers alternative visions of environmental stewardship which build on the knowledge and praxis of indigenous people, racial minorities, and rural communities.

Autorentext
Prakash Kashwan is Associate Professor of Environmental Studies and an affiliated faculty at the Heller School of Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University, Waltham. He is the author of Democracy in the Woods: Environmental Conservation and Social Justice in India, Tanzania, and Mexico (Oxford University Press 2017), Editor of Climate Justice in India (Cambridge University Press 2022), Editor of the journal Environmental Politics (Taylor & Francis), and co-founder of Climate Justice Network. Aseem Hasnain is a sociologist at California State University, Fresno. Prior to his PhD (UNC @ Chapel Hill), he was a community organizer with non-profits working with indigenous and peasant communities in Western, and Central India. He is a political sociologist interested in the ideological dimensions of politics, and culture. His published research engages with indigenous social movements; identity politics, colonialism, democracy, and the public sphere; comparative human rights; politics of knowledge production; and the linkages between caste ideology and vegetarianism. He grew up in Lucknow India, and lives in Fresno, CA.

Zusammenfassung
We live in a moment rife with mixed emotionsexistential anxieties about catastrophic climate change, presumptuous confidence in planet-hacking geoengineering technologies, and hopefulness of youth climate activism. Decolonizing Environmentalism helps us navigate these emotions and reimagine our approach to environmental stewardship. 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.

Inhalt
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

Weitere Informationen

  • Allgemeine Informationen
    • Sprache Englisch
    • Gewicht 282g
    • Untertitel Alternative Visions and Practices of Environmental Action
    • Autor Prakash Kashwan , Aseem Hasnain
    • Titel Decolonizing Environmentalism
    • Veröffentlichung 27.01.2025
    • ISBN 978-1-350-33546-2
    • Format Kartonierter Einband
    • EAN 9781350335462
    • Jahr 2025
    • Größe H215mm x B12mm x T140mm
    • Herausgeber Bloomsbury Academic
    • Anzahl Seiten 216
    • GTIN 09781350335462

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