Fr. 76.00

Grassroots Environmental Governance - Community Engagements With Industry

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Grassroots movements can pose serious challenges to both governments and corporations. However, grassroots actors possess a variety of motivations, and their visions of development may evolve in complex ways. Meanwhile, their relative powerlessness obliges them to forge an array of shifting alliances and to devise a range of adaptive strategies.

Grassroots Environmental Governance presents a compilation of in-depth ethnographic case studies, based on original research. Each of the chapters focuses specifically on grassroots engagements with the agents of various forms of industrial development. The book is geographically diverse, including analyses of groups based in both the global North and South, and represents a range of disciplinary perspectives. This allows the collection to explore themes that cross-cut specific localities and disciplinary boundaries, and thus to generate important theoretical insights into the complexities of grassroots engagements with industry.

This volume will be of great interest to scholars of environmental activism, environmental governance, and environmental studies in general.

List of contents










1. Introduction
Part I: Strategies
2. Mapping ecologies of resistance
3. Red-green alliance-building against Durban's port-petrochemical complex expansion
4. Indigenous by association: Legitimation and grassroots engagements with multinational mining in New Caledonia
Part II: Relationships
5. Governing from the ground up? Translocal networks and the ambiguous politics of environmental justice in Bolivia
6. Between sacrifice and compensation: Collective action and the aftermath of oil disaster in Esmeraldas, Ecuador
7. From contested cotton to the ban on brinjal: India's shifting risk narratives in opposition to genetically engineered agriculture
Part III: Internal Dynamics
8. Contesting development: Pastoralism, mining and environmental politics in Mongolia
9. Micropolitics in the Marcellus Shale
Part IV: Politics
10. Accumulating insecurity and risk along the energy frontier


About the author










Leah S. Horowitz is Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA.
Michael J. Watts is Professor of Geography at the University of California, Berkeley, USA.


Summary

This book presents a compilation of in-depth, ethnographic case studies, based on original research. Each of the chapters focuses specifically on grassroots engagements with the agents of various forms of industrial development.

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