| 內容註: |
Chapter 1. Introduction to Community, Psychology and Climate Justice -- Part I. (Re)imagining structure, capital and systems for alternative futures -- Chapter 2. What Would It Mean to Win? Imagining Alternative Ecopolitical Futures with Young Climate Justice Activists -- Chapter 3. Who Is Responsible for Tackling Our Environmental and Wider Social Challenges? Participant Data and Reflections for Community Psychology -- Chapter 4. The Climate Crisis is Political Violence: What Can Psychology Do? -- Chapter 5. Three Radical R's of Environmentalism: From "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle" to "Regulation, Redistribution, and Reparations" -- Chapter 6. Resisting Capitalism, Resisting Climate Change: Community Psychology in and against the Capitalocene -- Part II. Intersectional Politics and Action -- Chapter 7. Disability and Climate Justice: Poetry as Praxis -- Chapter 8. Reflections on Violence Against Women and Climate Change Collaborative Research in the Asia Pacific Region -- Chapter 9. "You should be grateful that you are here": A collaborative autoethnographic study on Black youth Activism representation -- Chapter 10. Queering Eco-Anxiety: An Autoethnographic and Intimate Exploration of Moving from Distress to Possibility Amidst the Climate Crisis -- Chapter 11. Decolonial Considerations of Environmentalism -- Part III. Praxis -- Chapter 12. Healing the Frontlines - Nurturing Radical Care in the Climate Justice Movement -- Chapter 13. Advancing Participatory Methodologies for the Symbiocene: Theory, Allyship and Multisensory Techniques -- Chapter 14. Working Towards Representation, Diversity, and Capacity Building in Conservation: Using Photovoice to Explore Justice-Driven Conservation -- Chapter 15. Exploring the Possible Role of Community Psychology Responses to Climate Change-Induced Internal Displacement in Benue, Nigeria -- Chapter 16. Building Solidarity Across Borders in the Struggles for Climate Justice. |