Routledge handbook of gender and environment
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Routledge handbook of gender and environment
(Routledge international handbooks)
Routledge, 2019, c2017
- : pbk
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"First issued in paperback 2019"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographies and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Environment gathers together state-of-the-art theoretical reflections and empirical research from leading researchers and practitioners working in this transdisciplinary and transnational academic field. Over the course of the book, these contributors provide critical analyses of the gender dimensions of a wide range of timely and challenging topics, from sustainable development and climate change politics, to queer ecology and interspecies ethics in the so-called Anthropocene.
Presenting a comprehensive overview of the development of the field from early political critiques of the male domination of women and nature in the 1980s to the sophisticated intersectional and inclusive analyses of the present, the volume is divided into four parts:
Part I: Foundations
Part II: Approaches
Part III: Politics, policy and practice
Part IV: Futures.
Comprising chapters written by forty contributors with different perspectives and working in a wide range of research contexts around the world, this Handbook will serve as a vital resource for scholars, students, and practitioners in environmental studies, gender studies, human geography, and the environmental humanities and social sciences more broadly.
Table of Contents
Gender and environment: an introduction
PART I: Foundations
Chapter 1. Rachel Carson was right - then and now
Chapter 2. The Death of Nature: foundations of ecofeminist thought
Chapter 3. The dilemma of dualism
Chapter 4. Gender and environment from 'women, environment and development' to feminist political ecology
Chapter 5. Ecofeminist political economy: a green and feminist agenda
Chapter 6. Naturecultures and feminist materialism
Chapter 7. Posthumanism, ecofeminism, and inter-species relations
PART II: Approaches
Chapter 8. Gender, livelihoods, and sustainability: anthropological research
Chapter 9. Gender's critical edge: feminist political ecology, postcolonial intersectionality, and the coupling of race and gender
Chapter 10. Gender and environmental justice
Chapter 11. Gender differences in environmental concern: sociological explanations
Chapter 12. Social ecology: a transdisciplinary approach to gender and environment research
Chapter 13. Gender and environmental (in)security: from climate conflict to ecosystem instability
Chapter 14. Gender, environmental governmentality, and the discourses of sustainable development
Chapter 15. Feminism and biopolitics: a cyborg account
Chapter 16. Exploring industrial, eco-modern, and ecological masculinities
Chapter 17. Transgender environments
Chapter 18. A fruitless endeavour: confronting the heteronormativity of environmentalism
PART III: Politics, policy and practice
Chapter 19. Gender and environmental policy
Chapter 20. Gender politics in Green parties
Chapter 21. Good green jobs for whom? a feminist critique of the green economy
Chapter 22. Gender dimensions of sustainable consumption
Chapter 23. Sexual stewardship: environment, development, and the gendered politics of population
Chapter 24. Gender equality, sustainable agricultural development, and food security
Chapter 25. Whose debt for whose nature? gender and nature in neoliberalism's war against subsistence
Chapter 26. Gender and climate change politics
Chapter 27. Changing the climate of participation: the gender constituency in the global climate change regime
Chapter 28. Planning for climate change: REDD+SES as gender-responsive environmental action
PART IV: Futures
Chapter 29. Pragmatic utopias: intentional gender-democratic and sustainable communities
Chapter 30. Feminist futures and 'other worlds': ecologies of critical spatial practice
Chapter 31. Orca intimacies and environmental slow death: earthling ethics for a claustrophobic world
Chapter 32. The end of gender or deep green trans-misogyny?
Chapter 33. Welcome to the white (m)Anthropocene? a feminist-environmentalist critique
by "Nielsen BookData"