Contemporary environmental politics : from margins to mainstream
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Contemporary environmental politics : from margins to mainstream
(Routledge research in environmental politics, 12)
Routledge, 2006
- : pbk.
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This new collection from the leading journal, Environmental Politics, presents an excellent overview of the key themes found in contemporary green political thought since the early 1990s.
Bringing together the journal's major work, this new book charts a fascinating period in which environmental politics developed from a marginal position in society and the academy, to its current place in the intellectual mainstream.
Subdivided into clear sections on political theory, social movements, political economy and policy questions, and assisted by a contextualising introduction, this volume focuses on a set of clear themes:
the character of green political theory
relationships with other political traditions and theories
origins and dynamics of contemporary environmental politics
differences, similarities and tensions between the North and South
the relationship of environmentalism to market economics and ecological modernization
environmental aspects of distributive justice at the local, national and global levels
the roles, value and valuing of nature in green theory and institutional practice.
As a compilation, this book is unique. It delivers a snapshot of a variety of issues in the field, and is therefore ideally suited to teaching purposes, especially at postgraduate level. In addition, as each section is chronologically arranged, an evolution of related ideas can be clearly seen and appreciated, which builds an excellent understanding of the field of environmental politics
Table of Contents
Introduction Section 1: Theory 1. The High Ground is Green 2. Social Ecology and the `Man Question' 3. Green Liberalisms: Nature, Agency and the Good 4. Habermas and Green Political Thought: Two Roads Converging Section 2: Green Movements 5. Why Did New Zealand and Tasmania Spawn the World's First Green Parties? 6. Environmentalism and the Global Divide 7. Strategies of Resistance at the Pollok Free State Road Protest Camp Section 3: Green Political Economy 8. Free Market Environmentalism: Friend or Foe? 9. Public Choice, Institutional Economics, Public Codes 10. Ecological Modernisation, Ecological Modernitie Section 4: Policy 11. Power, Politics and Environmental Inequality 12. The Global Environmental Facility in its North-South Context 13. Explaining National Variations of Air Pollution Levels: Political Institutions and their Impact on Environmental Policymaking 14. Citizens' Juries and Valuing the Environment: A Proposal
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