A History of Environmentalism: Local Struggles, Global Histories
Editat de Dr Marco Armiero, Professor Lise Sedrezen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 iul 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441115720
ISBN-10: 1441115722
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1441115722
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Combines political ecology and environmental history, offering a non-traditional history of environmentalism
Notă biografică
Marco Armiero is Director of the Environmental Humanities Laboratory at the Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm. He is the co-editor of Nature and History in Modern Italy (2010), author of A Rugged Nation: Mountains and the Making of Modern Italy (2011) and a senior editor of the journal, Capitalism Nature Socialism. Lise Sedrez is Professor at the Instituto de História, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. She is the co-editor of the book series 'Latin American Landscapes' and the editor of Topoi: Revista de História.
Cuprins
1. Introduction Marco Armiero (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden) and Lise Sedrez (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)2. Preservation, parks, and place: Rethinking America's 'best idea' Jerritt Frank (University of Missouri, USA)3. Biological diversity as a political force in Australia Libby Robin (Australian National University)4. Oil, ethnic minority groups and environmental struggles against multinational oil companies and the federal government in the Nigerian Niger Delta since the 1990s Phia Steyn (University of Stirling, UK)5. Protecting the Tibetan Antelope: A historical narrative and missing storiesMao Da (Beijing Normal University, China) and Mei Xueqin (Tsinghua University, China)6. Blood on the ice: The Greenpeace Campaign against the harp seal slaughter Frank Zelko (University of Vermont, USA)7. The struggle for justice in Bhopal: A new/old breed of transnational social movement Stephen Zavestoski (University of San Francisco, USA)8. Rubber, trees and communities: Rubber tappers in the Brazilian Amazon in the late 20th century Lise Sedrez (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)9. Garbage under the volcano. The waste crisis in Campania and the struggles for environmental justice Marco Armiero (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)10. The great fear: European environmentalism in the atomic age Hein-Anton van der Heijden (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)Index
Recenzii
A History of Environmentalism is an important and much-need contribution to the field. [The introduction] offers a succinct, compelling, and beautifully written overview of not the environmental movement, as early scholarship in environmental history was so prone to invoke, but the diverse and plural environmental movements that have shaped thought and action across the globe. Dipping into the book, we are treated to a diversity of local stories and struggles. Taken as a whole, they illuminate how important the need is to share stories of environmental and social struggles with each other.
[I]nformative, scholarly, well written and referenced. I couldn't put it down. The perspectives are excitingly innovative, the views are presented through unfamiliar perspectives and there is a wide variety of issues and of geographies. The interaction and interplay between global levels of activism and government, nations and society are interestingly revealed. The editors and authors have adopted a transnational approach and focus, even though chapters are local studies. The simple narratives are made complex - as good histories should - and the stereotypes of victim are deftly unpacked. I cannot think of a more appropriate book to introduce anyone to environmental justice.
This collection of nine case histories, plus the editors' introduction, is an international endeavor. Armiero, Sedrez, and contributors from Europe, the US, China, and Australia cover a diverse range of topics. These include rethinking US national parks, saving Australia's Little Desert from agricultural development, oil pollution in Nigeria's Niger Delta, protecting Tibetan antelope from poachers, Greenpeace's unsuccessful attempt to save seal pups from pelt hunters, and Bhopal's struggle for adequate financial compensation after the 1984 pesticide disaster in a Union Carbide plant. . Well-documented chapters, one illustration, two maps. Summing Up: Recommended. Academic and professional library collections.
[I]nformative, scholarly, well written and referenced. I couldn't put it down. The perspectives are excitingly innovative, the views are presented through unfamiliar perspectives and there is a wide variety of issues and of geographies. The interaction and interplay between global levels of activism and government, nations and society are interestingly revealed. The editors and authors have adopted a transnational approach and focus, even though chapters are local studies. The simple narratives are made complex - as good histories should - and the stereotypes of victim are deftly unpacked. I cannot think of a more appropriate book to introduce anyone to environmental justice.
This collection of nine case histories, plus the editors' introduction, is an international endeavor. Armiero, Sedrez, and contributors from Europe, the US, China, and Australia cover a diverse range of topics. These include rethinking US national parks, saving Australia's Little Desert from agricultural development, oil pollution in Nigeria's Niger Delta, protecting Tibetan antelope from poachers, Greenpeace's unsuccessful attempt to save seal pups from pelt hunters, and Bhopal's struggle for adequate financial compensation after the 1984 pesticide disaster in a Union Carbide plant. . Well-documented chapters, one illustration, two maps. Summing Up: Recommended. Academic and professional library collections.