Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice

Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice employs the concept of coloniality to examine the relationship between global environmental governance and environmental justice.

Global environmental governance is perceived to be the natural solution for global environmental problems; however, its liberal emphasis reproduces colonial hierarchies at the expense of marginalized groups in the Global North and South alike. To develop this argument, this book draws on case studies that elucidate multiple expressions of coloniality in instances of socio-environmental conflict. With a focus on extractivism, the authors explore case studies in Greece and Honduras to illustrate the impact of existing global environmental governance institutions on marginalized groups and local communities, as well as case studies of gender and multispecies justice to highlight the opportunities and limitations of efforts to challenge liberal governance institutions and provide new pathways for enhancing environmental justice.

Overall, the book aims to initiate a debate on how to decolonize global environmental politics and will be of particular interest to teachers, researchers, and students of environmental studies, global governance, development studies, political ecology, international political economy, and critical theory, as well as policymakers and civil society specialists.

1147025750
Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice

Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice employs the concept of coloniality to examine the relationship between global environmental governance and environmental justice.

Global environmental governance is perceived to be the natural solution for global environmental problems; however, its liberal emphasis reproduces colonial hierarchies at the expense of marginalized groups in the Global North and South alike. To develop this argument, this book draws on case studies that elucidate multiple expressions of coloniality in instances of socio-environmental conflict. With a focus on extractivism, the authors explore case studies in Greece and Honduras to illustrate the impact of existing global environmental governance institutions on marginalized groups and local communities, as well as case studies of gender and multispecies justice to highlight the opportunities and limitations of efforts to challenge liberal governance institutions and provide new pathways for enhancing environmental justice.

Overall, the book aims to initiate a debate on how to decolonize global environmental politics and will be of particular interest to teachers, researchers, and students of environmental studies, global governance, development studies, political ecology, international political economy, and critical theory, as well as policymakers and civil society specialists.

56.99 In Stock
Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice

Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice

Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice

Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice

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Overview

Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance: Coloniality, Extractivism, and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice employs the concept of coloniality to examine the relationship between global environmental governance and environmental justice.

Global environmental governance is perceived to be the natural solution for global environmental problems; however, its liberal emphasis reproduces colonial hierarchies at the expense of marginalized groups in the Global North and South alike. To develop this argument, this book draws on case studies that elucidate multiple expressions of coloniality in instances of socio-environmental conflict. With a focus on extractivism, the authors explore case studies in Greece and Honduras to illustrate the impact of existing global environmental governance institutions on marginalized groups and local communities, as well as case studies of gender and multispecies justice to highlight the opportunities and limitations of efforts to challenge liberal governance institutions and provide new pathways for enhancing environmental justice.

Overall, the book aims to initiate a debate on how to decolonize global environmental politics and will be of particular interest to teachers, researchers, and students of environmental studies, global governance, development studies, political ecology, international political economy, and critical theory, as well as policymakers and civil society specialists.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781040396230
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 07/25/2025
Series: Transforming Environmental Politics and Policy
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 268
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Wendy Godek is Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations at Roger Williams University, USA.

Gabriela Kütting is Professor of Global Environmental Politics in the Department of Political Science at Rutgers University, Newark, USA.

Table of Contents

Introduction Part 1 Conceptual Framework 1. Coloniality in Global Environmental Politics 2 . The Coloniality of Global Environmental Governance 3. Coloniality and Environmental Justice Part 2 Case Studies of Extractivism in the Global North and Global South 4. Extractivism in an EU Context: Greece, Environmental Justice, and Gold Mining 5. Land Grabbing and Extractivism in the Honduran Muskitia Part 3 Reconsidering Global Environmental Governance 6. Women and Extractivism 7. Coloniality and Multi-Species Justice Conclusion

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