Confronting Climate Coloniality
Title | Confronting Climate Coloniality PDF eBook |
Author | Farhana Sultana |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Pages | 261 |
Release | 2024-10-09 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 1040176550 |
This timely and urgent collection brings together cutting-edge interdisciplinary scholarship and ideas from around the world to present critical examinations of climate coloniality. Confronting Climate Coloniality exposes how legacies of colonialism, imperialism, and capitalism co-produce and exacerbate the climate crisis, create disproportionate impacts on those who contributed the least to climate change, and influence global and local responses. Climate coloniality is perpetuated through processes of neoliberalism, racial capitalism, development interventions, economic growth models, media, and education. Confronting climate coloniality entails decolonizing climate discourses and governance, challenging the dominant framings and policies, interrogating material, geopolitical, and institutional arrangements for tackling the climate crisis, and centering Global South and Indigenous knowledge, experiences, strategies, and solutions. Confronting Climate Coloniality: Decolonizing Pathways for Climate Justice provides critical insights and strategies for transformative action and fosters deeper understandings of the structural injustices entangled with climate change in governance, framings, policies, responses, and praxis. This collection offers pioneering interdisciplinary research on alternative frameworks for decolonized approaches for more meaningful climate justice. With originality, scholarly rigor, and emphasis on amplifying marginalized voices, this collection is an indispensable resource for interdisciplinary scholars, policymakers, and activists committed to advancing climate justice.
The Right to Water
Title | The Right to Water PDF eBook |
Author | Farhana Sultana |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 289 |
Release | 2013-10-18 |
Genre | Technology & Engineering |
ISBN | 1136518649 |
The right to clean water has been adopted by the United Nations as a basic human right. Yet how such universal calls for a right to water are understood, negotiated, experienced and struggled over remain key challenges. The Right to Water elucidates how universal calls for rights articulate with local historical geographical contexts, governance, politics and social struggles, thereby highlighting the challenges and the possibilities that exist. Bringing together a unique range of academics, policy-makers and activists, the book analyzes how struggles for the right to water have attempted to translate moral arguments over access to safe water into workable claims. This book is an intervention at a crucial moment into the shape and future direction of struggles for the right to water in a range of political, geographic and socio-economics contexts, seeking to be pro-active in defining what this struggle could mean and how it might be taken forward in a far broader transformative politics. The Right to Water engages with a range of approaches that focus on philosophical, legal and governance perspectives before seeking to apply these more abstract arguments to an array of concrete struggles and case studies. In so doing, the book builds on empirical examples from Africa, Asia, Oceania, Latin America, the Middle East, North America and the European Union.
Water Politics
Title | Water Politics PDF eBook |
Author | Farhana Sultana |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2020 |
Genre | Right to water |
ISBN | 9781138320024 |
This volume broadens existing discussions on the right to water in order to critically shed light on the pathways, pitfalls, prospects, and constraints that exist in achieving global goals, as well as advance debates around water governance and water justice.
Changing Our Ways
Title | Changing Our Ways PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Newell |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 75 |
Release | 2022-05-31 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 9781009108492 |
In this Element, the authors develop an account of the role of behaviour change that is more political and social by bringing questions of power and social justice to the heart of their enquiry in order to appreciate how questions of responsibility and agency are unevenly distributed within and between societies. The result is a more holistic understanding of behaviour, as just one node within an ecosystem of transformation that bridges the individual and systemic. Their account is more attentive to questions of governance and the processes of collective steering necessary to facilitate large scale change across a diversity of actors, sectors and regions than the dominant emphasis on individuals and households. It is also more historical in its approach, looking critically at the relevance of historical parallels regarding large-scale behaviour change and what might be learned and applied to the contemporary context action.
Ice Ages
Title | Ice Ages PDF eBook |
Author | Allan Mazur |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 275 |
Release | 2022-02-10 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1316519406 |
Fascinating history of scientific 'discovery' of Ice Ages, and implications for current social issues: glaciology and sociology writ large.
Beyond State Crisis?
Title | Beyond State Crisis? PDF eBook |
Author | Mark Beissinger |
Publisher | Woodrow Wilson Center Press |
Pages | 538 |
Release | 2002-01-24 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9781930365087 |
The contributors not only study state breakdown but compare the consequences of post-communism with those of post-colonialism.
The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism
Title | The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism PDF eBook |
Author | Gerald Horne |
Publisher | NYU Press |
Pages | 256 |
Release | 2018-03-12 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1583676635 |
"Account of of the slave trade and its lasting effects on modern life, based on the history of the Eastern Seaboard of North America, the Caribbean, Africa, and what is now Great Britain"--