A Radical Green Political Theory

Portada
Psychology Press, 1999 - 409 páginas
This volume is the first systematic, comprehensive and cogent environmental political philosophy. It exposes the relationships between the ever-worsening environmental crises, the nature of prevailing economic structures and the role of the modern state, and concludes that the combination of these factors is driving humanity towards destruction. After analysing authoritarian, reformist, Marxist and anarchist approaches to the environmental problem, the author argues strongly that only the most radical of political practices can prevent an ecological catastrophe. This is explored through a detailed and original analysis of social relationships, power, the state, anarchism and Third World development.
 

Contenido

Three political perspectives
24
Interrelationism freedom and power
63
The StatePrimacy Theory
105
Development or underdevelopment
155
The state and nature
197
Towards a cooperative autonomy
254
Green policies and core green values
307
Greens and green parties
315
Deep ecology or social ecology?
336
Bibliography
361
Index
395
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