Buch, Englisch, 678 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 250 mm, Gewicht: 1333 g
Reihe: Critical Agrarian Studies
Buch, Englisch, 678 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 250 mm, Gewicht: 1333 g
Reihe: Critical Agrarian Studies
ISBN: 978-1-032-74165-9
Verlag: Routledge
The book interrogates the narratives and strategies that frame climate change and examines the institutionalised responses in agrarian settings, highlighting what exclusions and inclusions result. It explores how different people — in relation to class and other co-constituted axes of social difference such as gender, race, ethnicity, age and occupation — are affected by climate change, as well as the climate adaptation and mitigation responses being implemented in rural areas. The book in turn explores how climate change – and the responses to it - affect processes of social differentiation, trajectories of accumulation and in turn agrarian politics. Finally, the book examines what strategies are required to confront climate change, and the underlying political-economic dynamics that cause it, reflecting on what this means for agrarian struggles across the world.
The 26 chapters in this volume explore how the relationship between capitalism and climate change plays out in the rural world and, in particular, the way agrarian struggles connect with the huge challenge of climate change. Through a huge variety of case studies alongside more conceptual chapters, the book makes the often-missing connection between climate change and critical agrarian studies. The book argues that making the connection between climate and agrarian justice is crucial.
The chapters in this book were originally published in The Journal of Peasant Studies.
The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/oa-edit/10.4324/9781003467960/climate-change-critical-agrarian-studies-ian-scoones-saturnino-borras-jr-amita-baviskar-marc-edelman-nancy-lee-peluso-wendy-wolford, has been made available under a Creative Commons [Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND)] 4.0 license. A version of the open access title is also available on the OAPEN platform https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/85297 .
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate, Undergraduate Advanced, and Undergraduate Core
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Climate change and agrarian struggles 2. The environmentalization of the agrarian question and the agrarianization of the climate justice movement 3. Violent silence: framing out social causes of climate-related crises 4. Climate change and class conflict in the Anthropocene: sink or swim together? 5. The political life of mitigation: from carbon accounting to agrarian counter-accounts 6. Imagined transitions: agrarian capitalism and climate change adaptation in Colombia 7. Beyond bad weather: climates of uncertainty in rural India 8. Climate rentierism after coal: forests, carbon offsets, and post-coal politics in the Appalachian coalfields 9. Up in the air: the challenge of conceptualizing and crafting a post-carbon planetary politics to confront climate change 10. Power for the Plantationocene: solar parks as the colonial form of an energy plantation. 11. Oro blanco: assembling extractivism in the lithium triangle 12. Adapting to climate change among transitioning Maasai pastoralists in southern Kenya: an intersectional analysis of differentiated abilities to benefit from diversification processes 13. Advocating afforestation, betting on BECCS: land- based negative emissions technologies (NETs) and agrarian livelihoods in the global South 14. Food, famine and the free trade fallacy: the dangers of market fundamentalism in an era of climate emergency 15. Uneven resilience and everyday adaptation: making Rwanda's green revolution ‘climate smart’ 16. Rethinking ‘just transitions’ from coal: the dynamics of land and labour in anti-coal struggles 17. Rescaling the land rush? Global political ecologies of land use and cover change in key scenario archetypes for achieving the 1.5 °C Paris agreement target 18. Producing nature-based solutions: infrastructural nature and agrarian change in San Martín, Peru 19. Climate refugees or labour migrants? Climate reductive translations of women’s migration from coastal Bangladesh 20. Certificated exclusion: forest carbon sequestration project in Southwest China 21. Resilience and conflict: rethinking climate resilience through Indigenous territorial struggles 22. Resisting, leveraging, and reworking climate change adaptation projects from below: placing adaptation in Ecuador’s agrarian struggle 23. Linking climate-smart agriculture to farming as a service: mapping an emergent paradigm of datafied dispossession in India 24. Prefiguring buen sobrevivir: Lenca women’s (e)utopianism amid climate change. 25. Forest as ‘nature’ or forest as territory? Knowledge, power, and climate change conservation in the Peruvian Amazon 26. Whose security? Politics, risks and alternatives for climate security practices in agrarian-environmental perspectives