De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Who's Afraid of Gender? av Judith Butler (inbunden).
Köp båda 2 för 954 kr"This impressive collection breaks new theoretical, political and policy ground in the exploration of gender and environment. In challenging us to look beyond conventional narratives, the authors chart new feminist ways forward in this critical time of climate change and right-wing ascendancy. The keys to the future found here unlock our imaginations, allowing us to envision and start building a more just, peaceful and sustainable world." Betsy Hartmann, Professor Emerita of Development Studies and Senior Policy Analyst, Population and Development Program, Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA "More than 30 years of exploring gender and environment interfaces have brought us many different insights and interpretations. This inspirational handbook offers a wide and in-depth overview of feminist analyses and approaches on environment. It will help scholars, students, activists and policymakers to comprehend related politics, policies and practices and build a just and sustainable future." Irene Dankelman, Radboud University/IRDANA Advice, Netherlands "This remarkable, insightful, and comprehensive Handbook analyses the history, problems, and frameworks that characterize the complex relationships between gender and environment. An impressive assemblage of feminist writers from around the world provide powerful insights into the meanings of connections between women, gender, and nature as they have emerged in recent decades. Anyone interested in the history, politics, and real life examples surrounding ecofeminism will want to read this book." Carolyn Merchant, Professor of Environmental History, Philosophy, and Ethics at the University of California, Berkeley, USA "This book goes well beyond categorical framings of gender and environment as women and nature to embrace trans-disciplinary, postcolonial and intersectional analyses of heteronormativity, masculinism, racism, transgender and speciesism in the environment-gender nexus. In emphasising how gender is done and undone, it provides strategies of resistance to environmentally destructive practices and it offers critical hope to enable us to reimagine our relationship with the planet." Bob Pease, Professor, School of Social Sciences, University of Tasmania, Australia "This is the book Ive been waiting for. Its focus on gender and environment brings together a hugely impressive range of scholars to explore how gender inequalities and environmental crises are intertwined. The argument that masculinities are associated with exploitative environmental practices is an essential part of developing the policies we need to avoid environmental disaster. Given current political developments it could not be more timely and is certain to become essential reading for scholars and activists alike." Nickie Charles, Professor and Director of the Centre for the Study of Women and Gender, University of Warwick, UK "Sherilyn MacGregors Routledge Handbook of Gender and Environment is more than a reference work, its a great read. It encompasses the full gamut of gender and environment scholarship over more than three decades. The articles range from meditative and reflective to incendiary and revolutionary, each conveying key insights from engagement with a mix of social movements, activists, and theorists committed to social and ecological justice. MacGregors introduction is a peerless summary of the issues and debates, and Giovanna Di Chiros concluding chapter on the white (M)anthropocene is a stunner!" Dianne Rocheleau, Professor of Geography, Clark University, USA. "The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Environment is a thoughtful and expansive work that critically analyses key concepts and frameworks of this transdisciplinary field as well as the history and unfolding debates that have characterized the complex relationships between gender and environment. It is an essent
Sherilyn MacGregor is Reader in Environmental Politics at the University of Manchester, UK. She has been teaching Environmental Politics and Gender and Environment at undergraduate and postgraduate levels for 15 years and has been an editor and editorial board board member of Environmental Politics since 2007.
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. Genders 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 neoliberalisms 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