Environmental Justice

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Anil Agarwal
Anju Sharma
Atm O-sphere
Brendan Gleeson
Carbon Energy
Category=JP
Cecilia Martinez
climate justice
Cross Lake
Daniel Faber
Eco-nomic Growth
Ecological Justice
Em Issions
Em Issions Reduction
Energy Efficiency
Energy Sources
Energy System
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GHG Concentration
global environmental policy
High Level Nuclear Waste
IIASA Model
Indian Peoples
indigenous land rights
international environmental inequality
John Byrne
John Poupart
Lake Winnipeg
Leigh Glover
MH
Micro-economic Rationality
mountain
Narmada Struggle
Nelson River
Nicholas Low
North American Free Trade Agreement
political ecology
Revolutionary Ecology
risk society theory
Sandinista Government
Sardar Sarovar Dam
Steven M. Hoffman
Subodh Wagle
Sunita Narain
sustainable development conflicts
Van Der Pijl
Wolfgang Sachs
yucca
Yucca Mountain

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138522916
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Environmental justice is one of the most controversial and important issues in contemporary social science. Volume 8 of the Energy and Environmental Policy series challenges our understanding of environmental justice in a global context. It includes theoretical investigations and case studies by leading authors in the field.

Global forces of technology and the development of global markets are transforming social life and the natural order. These changes require a critical examination of nature-society relations. Increasingly, modernization assigns the risks of modernity to those with the least power and greatest vulnerability to environmental harm. Conventional environmentalism, which focuses on critique of the effects of humanity against nature, is inadequate to the challenges of globalization. In particular, it fails to explain sources of persistent patterns of social injustice that accompany escalating environmental exploitation. As the capacity for environmental destruction expands, broader concerns about environmental injustice have come to the fore, including awareness of threats to whole cultures, ways of life, and entire ecologies. The volume's authors consider the links between expanded patterns of environmental injustice and the structures and forces underlying and shaping the international political economy.

Environmental injustice is examined across a variety of cultures in the developed and developing world. Through case studies of climate colonialism, revolutionary ecology, and environmental commodification, the global and local dimensions of the problem are presented.The latest volume in this important series demonstrates that environmental justice cannot be reduced to simple parables of indifference, prejudice, or appropriation. It forges understanding of environmental injustice as a development of international political economy itself. Likewise, initiatives on behalf of environmental justice are seen as elements of broader movements to secure self-determination in a globalizing world. This book will be of interest to policymakers, energy and environmental experts, and all those interested in the environment and environmental law. It provides new perspectives on the place of environmental justice in international political and economic conflict.