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Climate Change and the Ecology of th...
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Kurtz, Reed Michael.
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Climate Change and the Ecology of the Political: Crisis, Hegemony, and the Struggle for Climate Justice.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Climate Change and the Ecology of the Political: Crisis, Hegemony, and the Struggle for Climate Justice./
作者:
Kurtz, Reed Michael.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2019,
面頁冊數:
342 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 82-03, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International82-03B.
標題:
Geography. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28037087
ISBN:
9798641436234
Climate Change and the Ecology of the Political: Crisis, Hegemony, and the Struggle for Climate Justice.
Kurtz, Reed Michael.
Climate Change and the Ecology of the Political: Crisis, Hegemony, and the Struggle for Climate Justice.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2019 - 342 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 82-03, Section: B.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Ohio State University, 2019.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
This dissertation responds to the global ecological crisis of climate change, showing how the temporal and spatial dimensions of the crisis challenge our capacities to imagine and implement effective political solutions. Rather than being natural limits, I argue these dimensions of the crisis are inherently social and political, derived from contradictions and antagonisms of the global capitalist nation-state system. I thus take a critical approach to ecology and politics, in the tradition of Marxist political ecology. I read Antonio Gramsci's political theories of hegemony and the integral state through an ecological framework that foregrounds the distinct roles that human labor, capital, and the state system play in organizing social and environmental relations. I develop an original conception of hegemony as a fundamentally ecological process that constitutes the reproduction of human relations within nature, which I use to analyze the politics of climate governance and climate justice. Grounded in textual analysis and fieldwork observations of state and civil society relations within the UNFCCC, I show that struggles for hegemony among competing coalitions of state and non-state actors have shaped the institutional frameworks and political commitments of the Paris climate regime complex. I demonstrate how climate governance reproduces capitalist political relations predicated on formal separation of `state' and `civil society,' and the endless accumulation of capital, thereby serving to reproduce, rather than resolve, the contradictions of the crisis. I then center my focus on the global movement of movements for climate justice. Using textual analysis and qualitative fieldwork conducted as a critically-situated, participant-observer of the climate justice movement at various sites, including the COP22 and COP23 climate negotiations, I show how the climate justice movement constitutes itself as a distinctly anti-systemic and ecological historical bloc in world politics. I demonstrate how ecological direct action is central to the movement's efforts to achieve "system change, not climate change," by working to reorganize the reproduction of relations between humans and the rest of nature along direct democratic lines.
ISBN: 9798641436234Subjects--Topical Terms:
524010
Geography.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Global environmental politics
Climate Change and the Ecology of the Political: Crisis, Hegemony, and the Struggle for Climate Justice.
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This dissertation responds to the global ecological crisis of climate change, showing how the temporal and spatial dimensions of the crisis challenge our capacities to imagine and implement effective political solutions. Rather than being natural limits, I argue these dimensions of the crisis are inherently social and political, derived from contradictions and antagonisms of the global capitalist nation-state system. I thus take a critical approach to ecology and politics, in the tradition of Marxist political ecology. I read Antonio Gramsci's political theories of hegemony and the integral state through an ecological framework that foregrounds the distinct roles that human labor, capital, and the state system play in organizing social and environmental relations. I develop an original conception of hegemony as a fundamentally ecological process that constitutes the reproduction of human relations within nature, which I use to analyze the politics of climate governance and climate justice. Grounded in textual analysis and fieldwork observations of state and civil society relations within the UNFCCC, I show that struggles for hegemony among competing coalitions of state and non-state actors have shaped the institutional frameworks and political commitments of the Paris climate regime complex. I demonstrate how climate governance reproduces capitalist political relations predicated on formal separation of `state' and `civil society,' and the endless accumulation of capital, thereby serving to reproduce, rather than resolve, the contradictions of the crisis. I then center my focus on the global movement of movements for climate justice. Using textual analysis and qualitative fieldwork conducted as a critically-situated, participant-observer of the climate justice movement at various sites, including the COP22 and COP23 climate negotiations, I show how the climate justice movement constitutes itself as a distinctly anti-systemic and ecological historical bloc in world politics. I demonstrate how ecological direct action is central to the movement's efforts to achieve "system change, not climate change," by working to reorganize the reproduction of relations between humans and the rest of nature along direct democratic lines.
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https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28037087
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