Environmental Justice and Sustainability in the Former Soviet Union
In: Environmental politics, Volume 19, Issue 4, p. 681-682
ISSN: 0964-4016
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In: Environmental politics, Volume 19, Issue 4, p. 681-682
ISSN: 0964-4016
In: Página indómita 15
In: Rethinking Political and International Theory
Cover -- Contents -- Foreword -- Introduction: An Imaginary Crisis? Reframing Environmentalism -- I: Nature and Society -- 1 Society within Nature -- 2 Nature within Society -- 3 From Nature to Human Environment -- II: Sustainability After the End of Nature -- 4 The Principle of Sustainability -- 5 The Politics of Sustainability -- III: Towards a Green Liberal Society -- 6 Green Politics, Democracy, and Liberalism -- 7 Can We Democratise Sustainability? -- 8 Ecological Citizenship and Sustainability -- Conclusion: The Future of Environmentalism -- Bibliography -- Index.
In: Rethinking political and international theory
In: SpringerBriefs in Political Science
This short book sets out to explore the concept of nature in the context of a changing reality, in which the extent of our transformation of the environment has become evident: What is nature and to what extent has humanity transformed it? How do nature and society relate to one another? What does the idea of a sustainable society entail and how can nature be understood as a political subject? What is the Anthropocene and how does it affect nature as both an idea and a material entity? Has nature perhaps "ended?" In addressing these questions, the author delivers a concise but meaningful study of contemporary understandings of nature, one that goes beyond the limits posed by a single discipline. Adopting a truly comprehensive perspective, the work incorporates classical disciplines such as philosophy, evolutionary theory and the history of ideas; new and mixed approaches ranging from environmental sociology to neurobiology and ecological economics and the emerging area of the environmental humanities and represents a growing branch of political thought that views nature as a new political subject
In: Rethinking political and international theory
It is generally accepted that we must advance towards a sustainable society to survive. By challenging conventional wisdom about the ecological crisis and reframing the traditional values of Green Politics, Real Green: Sustainability after the end of nature offers new answers to the key questions of whether this is really the case, what such a society will look like, and how it is to be achieved.
In: Revista española de investigaciones sociológicas: ReiS, Issue 124, p. 11-44
ISSN: 1988-5903
Así como la configuración predominantemente estatal de la política tuvo en su centro a la movilización colectiva nacional, la emergencia de los movimientos sociales transnacionales está contribuyendo decisivamente a la redefinición contemporánea de la política posnacional. De hecho, no puede afirmarse simplemente que la mundialización haya producido formas transnacionales de acción colectiva; la propia mundialización es, en parte, la consecuencia de una temprana transformación de la movilización social. Sea como fuere, no parece que la teoría política haya respondido todavía adecuadamente al tránsito de unos movimientos nacionales, instalados cómodamente hasta ahora en el familiar marco del Estado-nación, a unos movimientos transnacionales que no responden a un contexto institucional tan definido. Este artículo trata de arrojar luz sobre la naturaleza de estos novísimos movimientos transnacionales, con especial atención al movimiento antiglobalización y una vocación explicativa de sus relaciones con el orden político liberal.
In: Environmental politics, Volume 33, Issue 1, p. 190-192
ISSN: 1743-8934