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All We Want is the Earth

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Sixty years ago, an upsurge of social movements protested the ecological harms of industrial capitalism. In subsequent decades, environmentalism consolidated into forms of management and business s...
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  • 22 August 2023
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Sixty years ago, an upsurge of social movements protested the ecological harms of industrial capitalism. In subsequent decades, environmentalism consolidated into forms of management and business strategy that aimed to tackle ecological degradation while enabling new forms of green economic growth. However, the focus on spaces and species to be protected saw questions of human work and histories of colonialism pushed out of view.

This book traces a counter-history of modern environmentalism from the 1960s to the present day. It focuses on claims concerning land, labour and social reproduction arising at important moments in the history of environmentalism made by feminist, anti-colonial, Indigenous, workers’ and agrarian movements. Many of these movements did not consider themselves ‘environmental,’ and yet they offer vital ways forward in the face of escalating ecological damage and social injustice.

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Price: $29.95
Pages: 194
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Bristol University Press
Publication Date: 22 August 2023
ISBN: 9781529218336
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism, Environmentalist thought and ideology, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Environmental Policy, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Geography, Green politics / ecopolitics / environmentalism, Development and environmental geography
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“An act of recovery, a reclaiming of movements and struggles that have been pushed out of frame by dominant interpretations of what gets to count as environmental politics.” Kai Heron, Lancaster University

Naomi Millner is Senior Lecturer of Human Geography, Geographical Sciences, at the University of Bristol. She is an activist-researcher, community gardener and storyteller. Her research projects are linked with questions of land and the politics of knowledge, and she is currently working with social movements and community groups in Central America and the UK on issues surrounding food and land poverty.

Patrick Bresnihan is a Lecturer in the Department of Geography at Maynooth University. He works across the interdisciplinary fields of political ecology, science and technology studies, and environmental humanities. His current research focuses on data centres, renewable energy infrastructures and bog landscapes in the context of the global ‘green’ transition and environmental justice.

1. Introduction: Beyond Modern Environmentalism

2. Suburb, Field, Laboratory: Recomposing Geographies of Early Environmentalism

First Interlude: Green and White Dreams

3. Revolt Against One-Worldism: Radical Claims on Land and Work Post-1968

Second Interlude: Planetary Icons

4. The Right to Subsist: Transnational Commons Against the Enclosure of Environments and Environmentalism

Third Interlude: Witnessing in the Global Resonance Machine

5. Earth Politics: Disagreement and Emergent Indigeneity in the So-Called Anthropocene

Fourth Interlude: Making Things Resonate

6. Conclusion: Resonance Beyond Environmentalism

Coda: Afterlives