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Race, Nature, and the Environment

Editat de Katie Meehan
en Limba Engleză Hardback – noi 2024
What might it mean to “unsettle” our disciplinary understanding of race, nature, and the environment? This book assembles diverse voices and approaches in geographic thinking on race and racialization during an era of climate crisis, toxic legacies, state violence, mass extinctions, carceral logics, and racial injustices that shape—and are shaped by—the (re)production of nature.
The volume advances new critical scholarship on race and racialization in Anglo-American geography; reflects on its uneven diffusion and unmet challenges; and notes the unstoppable force of insurgent thinking, abolition geography, critical race theory, Black and Indigenous geographies, scholar activism, and environmental justice praxis in taking hold and transforming the discipline. Together, the authors work across the vibrant fields of political ecology and human–environment geography; grapple with timely questions of land, water, territory, and place-making; render visible the spatial and socioecological reproduction of power and violence by capital and the state; and make space for the enduring politics of struggle on multiple registers—body, home, classroom, park, city, community, region, and world.
Race, Nature, and the Environment will interest students, academics, and researchers in Geography who are keen to learn about disciplinary approaches and debates in relation to race, racialization, environmental justice, and the politics of nature in a world marked by white supremacy. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the Annals of the American Association of Geographers.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032736365
ISBN-10: 1032736364
Pagini: 228
Dimensiuni: 210 x 280 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate, Undergraduate Advanced, and Undergraduate Core

Cuprins

Introduction: Unsettling Race, Nature, and Environment in Geography 1. Ecological Memory in the Biophysical Afterlife of Slavery 2. Unfixing Space: Toward Anti-Caste Philosophies of Nature 3. Toward “Total Freedom”: Black Ecologies of Land, Labor, and Livelihoods in the Mississippi Delta 4. Nature, Agriculture, and Black Space-Making in Serra dos Tapes, Brazil 5. Black Towns and (Legal) Marronage 6. Making the City of Lakes: Whiteness, Nature, and Urban Development in Minneapolis 7. Birds, Dogs, and Racism: Conflicts over Care in New York’s Central Park 8. Water Infrastructure as Intrusion: Race, Exclusion, and Nostalgic Futures in North Carolina 9. Regulating Improvement: Industrial Water Pollution, White Settler Authority, and Capitalist Reproduction in the St. Clair–Detroit River Corridor, 1945–1972 10. Articulating Indigenous Law as “Environmental Protection”? The Piikani Nation and the Oldman River Dam Environmental Assessment Review Process 11. On Swampification: Black Ecologies, Moral Geographies, and Racialized Swampland Destruction 12. At Home: Black Women’s Collective Claims to Environmentally Just Rental Housing 13. Toward a World Where We Can Breathe: Abolitionist Environmental Justice Praxis 14. A Pedagogy of Unbecoming for Geoscience Otherwise 15. Storytelling Earth and Body

Notă biografică

Katie Meehan is a geographer at King’s College London, Co-Director of King’s Water Centre, and Editor (Nature and Society) for the Annals of the American Association of Geographers. She has published widely on infrastructural geographies, household water insecurity, political ecology, and environmental justice. Her most recent book is Water: A Critical Introduction.

Descriere

This book assembles diverse voices and approaches in geographic thinking on race and racialization during an era of climate crisis, toxic legacies, state violence, mass extinctions, carceral logics, and racial injustices that shape—and are shaped by—the (re)production of nature.