The Oxford handbook of environmental political theory / edited by Teena Gabrielson, Cheryl Hall, John M. Meyer, and David Schlosberg.
Material type:
TextSeries: Oxford handbooksPublisher: Oxford, United Kingdom : Oxford University Press, 2016Copyright date: c2016Edition: First editionDescription: 1 online resource (xvii, 662 pages) : illustrationsContent type: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780191508417 (electronic bk.)
- 0191508411 (electronic bk.)
- Environmental political theory
- 320.58 23
- JA75.8 .O94 2016
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Environmental political theory and the history of Western political theory / Harlan Wilson -- Culture and difference: non-Western approaches to defining environmental Issues / Farah Godrej -- Environmental political theory and the liberal tradition / Piers H.G. Stephens -- Environmental political theory and republicanism / Peter Cannavò -- Human nature, non-human nature, and needs: environmental political theory and critical theory / Andrew Biro -- Environmental political theory, environmental ethics, and political science: bridging the gap / Kimberly K. Smith -- Environmental political theory's contribution to sustainability studies / Seaton Patrick Tarrant and Leslie Paul Thiele -- Environmental political theory and environmental action research teams / Romand Coles -- "Nature" and the (built) environment / Steven Vogel -- Theorizing the nonhuman through spatial and environmental thought / Justin Williams -- Challenging the human X environment framework / Samantha Frost -- Environmental management in the anthropocene / David Schlosberg -- Interspecies / Rafi Youatt -- Floral sensations: plant biopolitics / Catriona A.H. Sandilands -- Cosmopolitanism and the environment / Simon Caney -- Sustainability, post-sustainability, unsustainability / Ingolfur Blühdorn -- Population, environmental discourse, and sustainability / Diana Coole -- Are there limits to limits? / Andrew Dobson -- Green political economy: beyond orthodox undifferentiated economic growth as a permanent feature of the economy / John Barry -- Environmental and climate justice / Steve Vanderheiden -- Environmental human rights / Kerri Woods -- Responsibility for climate change as a structural injustice / Robyn Eckersley -- Environmental justice and the anthropocene meme / Giovanna Di Chiro -- The limits of freedom and the freedom of limits / Jason Lambacher -- Bodies, environment, and agency / Teena Gabrielson -- Cultivating human and non-human capabilities for mutual flourishing / Breena Holland and Amy Linch -- Consumption and well-being / Paul Knights and John O'Neill -- Capital, environmental degradation, and economic externalization / Adrian Parr -- Environmental governmentality / Timothy W. Luke -- Political economy of the greening of the state / Matthew Paterson -- Environmental science and politics / Mark B. Brown -- Democracy as constraint and possibility for environmental action / Elisabeth Ellis -- Environmental authoritarianism and China / Mark Beeson -- Global environmental governance / John Dryzek -- Global environmental justice and the environmentalisms of the poor / Joan Martinez-Alier -- Indigenous environmental movements and the function of governance institutions / Kyle Whyte -- Reimagining radical environmentalism / Emily Howard and Sean Parson -- Framing and nudging for a greener future / Cheryl Hall -- Citizenship: radical, feminist, and green / Sherilyn Macgregor -- Ecological democracy and the co-participation of things / Lisa Disch.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI Available via World Wide Web.
Description based on print version record.