Grassroots Responses to Extractivism -

Grassroots Responses to Extractivism

Case Studies from Around the World
Buch | Hardcover
240 Seiten
2025
Bloomsbury Academic (Verlag)
978-1-350-33160-0 (ISBN)
79,95 inkl. MwSt
This volume makes visible the many innovative resistances and solutions emanating from the Global South, in response to the injustices of the current global ecological crises. Rooted in contemporary ecological imperialism, these crises are subjecting marginalized communities in the Global South to the worst socio-ecological repercussions worldwide, whilst mainstream environmental policies and solutions reproduce market-based approaches premised on a hegemonic Western world-view.

The book details a wide variety of case studies from across Asia, Africa and the Americas, such as deforestation activism in Cambodia and grassroots community organisation against large scale land transactions in Liberia – among many others. The contributors, composed of a mix of academics and activists, propose bottom-up solutions to the current ecological and climate crises. This work highlights how anti-capitalist, anti-colonial, and anti-anthropocentric alternatives and movements are realistic, holistic, and appropriate in the face of global ecological crises.

Mariko Frame is an international political economist whose research focuses on critical political economy perspectives on the environment. She is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Merrimack College in Massachusetts, USA. Samuel Grant has been an organizer working through the intersections of environmental, economic, racial, gender and cultural justice for decades. Since 1990 he has been on faculty at Metropolitan State University, USA, where he created the Minor in Community Organizing and Development. He currently leads MN350 as Executive Director. He is also a fellow of the Institute of the Environment, University of Minnesota, USA. Felix Mantz is a doctoral researcher and teaching associate at Queen Mary University of London, UK. His doctoral thesis examines persisting colonial relations to land and ecologies in Tanzania by drawing on a variety of methods, including archival research and interviews. His latest work can be found in Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment (ISLE), Review of International Political Economy (RIPE), and Journal of International Relations and Development (JIRD).

Chapter 1: Why Capitalist Development is Ecological Imperialism and Planetary Ecocide, and Why We Need Alternatives (Mariko Frame, Merrimack College, USA)

Chapter 2: Africana Critical Theory, Ecological Imperialism and Global Anti-Black Violence as Foundational in the Climate Crisis (Samuel Leguizamon Grant, MN350, Metropolitan State University, USA)

Chapter 3: Ecological Health and Justice Require Decolonization: Coloniality, Ecological Imperialism and Global Ecological Crises (Felix Mantz, Queen Mary University of London, UK)

NON-WESTERN ECOLOGICAL COSMOLOGIES AND WORLDVIEWS

Chapter 4: The Re-Emergence of the World of Cycles: Ceremonial Fire, Anthropocene Ashes, and the Renewal of Territories of Life (Leonardo Figueroa-Helland and Abigail Perez Aguilera, The New School, USA)

Chapter 5: Subverting Anthropocentrism and Shia Muslims: Alternatives From West Asia (Ali M. Kassem, American University of Beirut, Lebanon)

Chapter 6: Nourishing Decolonial Communities of Life: Indigenous and Afro-Indigenous Resurgences Beyond Syndemic Violence and Earth Crisis (Leonardo Figueroa Helland and Angela Martinez, in collaboration with Neftalí Reyes Mendez and Angélica Castro Rodríguez (Zapotec and Mixtec of Oaxaca), Juan José Lopez Negrete (Zenue and Afro-descendant) and Mileida Correa (Zenue), José Gualinga (Kichwa of Sarayaku), Stephanie Morningstar (Kanien’kehá:ka, Wakeniáhten), and Çaca Yvaire (Atakapa Ishak)

RESISTANCES AND STRATEGIES

Chapter 7: Racial Capitalism, Eco-Apartheid and the Necessity of Fundamental Social Change (Rose Brewer, University of Minnesota, USA)

Chapter 8: Interview with Cambodian Deforestation Activists Ouch Leng

Chapter 9: Participatory Video is a Revolutionary Tool! (Samwel Nangiria, Ngorongoro NGO Network and Nick Lunch, Co-InsightShare)

Chapter 10: Making Local Agency Visible: How Local Communities Resisted Large-Scale Land Transactions in Liberia (Ali Kaba, University of Washington, USA)

ALTERNATIVES AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GLOBAL SOUTH

Chapter 11: Evaluating Results and Transformative Potentials in Social Movement Praxis (Samuel Leguizamon Grant, MN350, Metropolitan State University, USA)

Chapter 12: The Pathalgadi Movement Of Jharkhand, India: A Case Study in Indigenous Revolt Beyond the Terms of Conventional Politics (Pratik Raghu, University of California Santa Barbara, USA)

Chapter 13: RISE and Treaty Rights Discourse in Northern Minnesota (Nancy Beaulieu, RISE Coalition and Dawn Goodwin, RISE Coalition)

Chapter 14: Poetry as Praxis for Resistance (Kahnapad Haider (Haider A. Khan), University of Denver, USA)

Bibliography

Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 20.2.2025
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Biologie Ökologie / Naturschutz
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Vergleichende Politikwissenschaften
ISBN-10 1-350-33160-0 / 1350331600
ISBN-13 978-1-350-33160-0 / 9781350331600
Zustand Neuware
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