May 2003
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19 Reads
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16 Citations
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May 2003
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19 Reads
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16 Citations
January 2003
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114 Reads
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91 Citations
January 2003
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224 Reads
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171 Citations
... Marinds' very own humanity is undermined by entangled regimes of color and capital in a region long denied its freedom and autonomy. In this context, environmental justice reveals itself, as Rose et al. (2012, p. 1) note, to be thoroughly entangled with human ways of inhabiting the world, and broader questions of politics, race, and social justice (see also Moore, Pandian and Kosek, 2003). At the same time, the characterization among Marind of oil palm as a foreign and rapacious plant-being problematizes the potential (and not merely symbolic) role of other-than-human species as perpetrators, and not just subjects, of injustice (cf. ...
May 2003
... Cultural and social geographers generally do not deploy cultural politics when engaging with the environment (Anderson 2019; Anderson et al. 2002), though some research has considered the cultural politics of natural environments (e.g., see Byrne's (2012) study on the racial politics of exclusion/inclusion in a Los Angeles urban park). A cultural politics of nature frame critically addresses how some meanings/aspects of nature are discursively (re-)constituted, while other disputed dimensions are eclipsed, to achieve certain objectives (Acharya 2015;Baviskar 2003;Moore, Pandian, and Kosek 2003). Modernised water provision systems, for instance, have been criticised for privileging the safety and security of tap water while infringing upon local indigenous peoples' cultural access to and relations with water (Baviskar 2003). ...
January 2003
... (Gibson-Graham, 2006, p. 56) Capitalocentrism functions via the abstraction and quantification of value into narrow terms of monetary worth, attempting to establish monetary "equivalence" between dissimilar goods, ideas, and services (Chomsky & Waterstone, 2021;Comaroff & Comaroff, 2001;Harvey, 2005Harvey, , 2006Harvey, , 2017Henderson, 2013;Parker, 2018;Miller, 2019). This tendency towards capitalocentric valuations of nature has been covered in detail by economists, geographers, and anthropologists (McCarthy & Prudham, 2004;Moore, et al, 2003;McKibben, 2007), as have the destructive and unsustainable impacts on natures and humans that result from these valuations (Plehwe et al, 2020;Barlett, 2005;Proctor, 2013;Gibson-Graham, 2006;Lowenhaupt-Tsing, 2005. ...
January 2003