Vasna Ramasar

Vasna Ramasar
  • Doctor of Philosophy
  • Lecturer at Lund University

About

23
Publications
15,193
Reads
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1,066
Citations
Introduction
I was born and raised in South Africa, a dynamic country, where I learnt important lessons of freedoms and justice,, people’s roles in nature and about inequality. I have 10 years research, consulting and teaching experience across southern and eastern Africa, Asia, Europe and north America prior to joining academia. My research focuses on environmental politics, political ecology, environmental justice and sustainability.
Current institution
Lund University
Current position
  • Lecturer
Additional affiliations
January 2015 - present
Lund University
Position
  • PostDoc Position
Description
  • I have acted as a supervisor for over ten Master's students in the Culture, Power and Sustainability Programme of the Division of Human Ecology. In addition, I am co-supervising one PhD in the Division.
January 2015 - present
Lund University
Position
  • PostDoc Position
Description
  • I teach in Culture, Power and Sustainability Masters programme at the Division of Human Ecology teaching global environmental justice, methodology, theory of science including Marxist, feminist and decolonial thinking, and coordinated the thesis course.
October 2008 - March 2009
Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, South Africa
Position
  • Senior Researcher
Description
  • As a senior researcher my role involved project and client management and research related to water governance in South Africa. I worked closely with the Department of Water Affairs on the relationships between water and health, including HIV and AIDS.
Education
April 2009 - November 2014
Lund University
Field of study
  • Sustainability Science
August 2007 - August 2008
London School of Economics and Political Science
Field of study
  • Development Studies
February 2002 - July 2006
University of KwaZulu-Natal
Field of study
  • Environmental Management

Publications

Publications (23)
Article
Extractivist practices threaten water security and with it, people's health and livelihoods. Numerous communities around the world are engaged in the strenuous work of resistance against mining. Through our previous research, we matured a sense that women are a major force behind organizing for water security, particularly because they often refer...
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Full-text available
Theories of energy justice are standardly used to evaluate decision-making and policy-design related to energy infrastructure. All too rarely attention is paid to the need for a method of justifying principles of justice as well as justice-based judgments that are appealed to in this context. This article responds to this need by offering an engage...
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This article examines the role of moral arguments in the delegitimation of transition policies. Previous research has highlighted attitudes and arguments that explain resistance against transition policies, including perceptions of unfairness; inefficiency and effectiveness; lack of trust; and ideology. This article provides further understanding o...
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Coal has long been one of the fossil fuels underpinning the energy systems of many countries around the world. Because of its long-standing history, many actors have an interest in retaining the status quo. In this article, we explore the complexities of a coal phase-out in different countries. Drawing on empirical material from Germany, India, Mex...
Article
Full-text available
The way in which we produce and consume energy has profound implications for our societies. How we configure our energy systems determines not only our chances of successfully dealing with climate change but also, how benefits and burdens of these systems are distributed. In this paper, we set out to map the literature on conflicts related to the e...
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This articles outlines the most pressing justice questions that arise from a transition to a fossil fuel-free welfare state in Sweden.
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This article explores the paradox of corporations using social and environmental justice concerns to market products that are themselves made in conditions of environmental and social injustice, most often in the Global South. The effects of the fashion industry on people is two-pronged: 1) the unsafe and exploitative conditions under which many ga...
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In the world we live in today, the presence and claims of crisis abound – from climate change, financial and political crisis to depression, livelihoods and personal security crisis. There is a challenge to studying crisis due to the ways in which crisis as a notion, condition and experience refers to and operates at various societal levels. Furthe...
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The Earth System Governance project is a global research alliance that explores novel, effective governance mechanisms to cope with the current transitions in the biogeochemical systems of the planet. A decade after its inception, this article offers an overview of the project's new research framework (which is built upon a review of existing earth...
Article
With the dual challenges of reducing emissions from fossil fuels and providing access to clean and affordable energy, there is an imperative for a transition to a low carbon energy system. The transition must take into consideration questions of energy justice to ensure that policies, plans and programmes guarantee fair and equitable access to reso...
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Transitioning to renewable energy is an imperative to help mitigate climate change, but such transitions are inevitably embedded in broader socio-ecological and political dynamics. Recent scholarship has focused on these more-than-technological dimensions of energy transitions to help understand their promises and drawbacks. This article contribute...
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Ensuring sustainable consumption and production is one of the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainable consumption can be supported through regulatory processes. Voluntary private regulatory schemes claiming to contribute to sustainability are a rapidly growing form of regulation. We study one such voluntary sustainability scheme...
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Full-text available
Everyday international political economy (EIPE) offers an opportunity to rethink the role of individuals and citizenry in shaping governance of natural resources. In South Africa, significant progress has been made by government in re-shaping water governance since the end of apartheid in the early 1990s. The role of government in water governance...
Article
The ecological debt concept emerged in the early 1990s from within social movements driven by rising environmental awareness, emerging Western consciousness of responsibility for past colonial subjugations, and a general sense of unease during the debt crisis. First developed organically, mainly in locally-scaled, civil contexts, ecological debt ha...

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