From Environmental Loss to Resistance
Infrastructure and the Struggle for Justice in North America
Michael Loadenthal editor Lea Rekow editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Massachusetts Press
Published:30th May '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
North Americans have reached a socioenvironmental tipping point where social transformation has become necessary to secure a stable and desirable future. As hurricanes destroy coastal areas that once hosted schools and homes, petroleum refineries choke nearby communities and their parks, and pipeline construction threatens water rights for indigenous peoples, communities are left to determine how to best manage and mitigate environmental loss.
In this new collection, a range of contributors -- among them researchers, practitioners, organizers, and activists -- explore the ways in which people counter or cope with feelings of despair, leverage action for positive change, and formulate pathways to achieve environmental justice goals. These essays pay particular attention to issues of race, class, economic liberalization, and geography; place contemporary environmental struggles in a critical context that emphasizes justice, connection, and reconciliation; and raise important questions about the challenges and responses that concern those pursuing environmental justice.
Contributors include the volume editors, Carol J. Adams, Randall Amster, Jan Inglis, Eileen Delehanty Pearkes, Zo?½ Roller, and Michael Truscello.
“This volume of engaged scholarship in environmental studies touches on a range of fields, including environmental history, ecocriticism, postcolonial studies, environmental policy, cultural anthropology, and indigenous studies, and offers a synthesis of stories that are not brought together often enough.”- Robert S. Emmett, author of Cultivating Environmental Justice: A Literary History of U.S. Garden Writing
ISBN: 9781625345042
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 425g
192 pages