Environmental politics : scale and power / Shannon O'Lear.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- 9780521765763 (hardback)
- 0521765765 (hardback)
- 9780521759137 (pbk.)
- 0521759137 (pbk.)
- 363.70561 22 OLE
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Central Library First floor | Baccah | 363.70561 OLE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 13955 | Available | 000025962 |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 208-226) and index.
Machine generated contents note: Acknowledgements; 1. Introduction; 2. Climate change; 3. Oil and energy; 4. Food security; 5. Garbage and waste; 6. Toxins; 7. Resource conflict; 8. Conclusion; References; Index.
"Shannon O'Lear brings a geographer's perspective to environmental politics. The book considers issues of climate change, energy, food security, toxins, waste, and resource conflict to explore how political, economic, ideological and military power have contributed to the generation of environmental issues and the formation of dominant narratives about them. The book encourages the reader to think critically about the power dynamics that shape (and limit) how we think about environmental issues and to expand the reader's understanding of why it matters that these issues are discussed at particular spatial scales. Applying a geographer's sense of scale and power leads to a better understanding of the complexity of environmental issues and will help formulate mitigation and adaptation strategies. The book will appeal mainly to advanced students and researchers from a geography background, but also to social and political scientists who wish to look at the topic from this different perspective"--
"This book considers issues of climate change, oil and energy, food security, toxins, waste, and resource conflict to explore how political, economic, ideological, and military power have contributed to the generation of environmental issues and the formation of dominant narratives about them. The book encourages the reader to think critically about the power dynamics that shape (and limit) how we think about environmental issues and to expand the reader's understanding of why it matters that these issues are discussed at particular spatial scales"--
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