Tyler M Tully’s research while affiliated with University of Oxford and other places

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Publications (1)


Race and climate change: Towards anti-racist ecologies
  • Article

September 2022

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76 Reads

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13 Citations

Politics

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Tyler M Tully

Global South scholars have long documented and theorised their communities’ struggles against the ecological degradation, toxic contamination, and climate change–related extreme weather events which result from the overlapping ills of colonialism, imperialism, and racial capitalism. Building on that existing work, contributors to this collection extend and deepen understandings of the material entanglements of race and ecology in our contemporary conjuncture. Speaking from various scales and locations, including the Caribbean, Brazil, Sri Lanka, and Palestine, the authors reflect on those sites while also collectively recovering and amplifying lineages of thought on ecology from across the South. As the contributions collected here show, the traps set by global structures of race also direct mainstream climate solutions back towards the expropriation, premature death, or prevention of birth of peoples of colour by various means, from militarised conservation to eugenic populationism. Confronting the racial logics of both ecological harm and its supposed solutions is therefore a key task of this collection. As a collective, however, the issue’s contributors also carve out paths to reparation and structural change which form the contours of an anti-racist ecology for our times.

Citations (1)


... Even as anthropogenic climate change increasingly manifests as devastating weather and more insidious gradual changes to socioecological systems (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPCC] 2022), powerful actors and wider society wedded to the current political-economic assemblage resist the need for transformational change (Stoddard et al. 2021). Indigenous and other subaltern groups have led the centuries-long confrontation against the logics, imperatives, and extractivist ideologies that undergird settler colonialism and capitalism, which created and continue to fuel climate injustices (Simpson 2017, Estes 2019, Ajl 2021, Tilley et al. 2023, Sakshi 2024. Others might not have as much at stake but seek 'climate justice' through advocacy. ...

Reference:

Australian third sector actors' theories of change for climate justice: real and apparent barriers and obscured root causes
Race and climate change: Towards anti-racist ecologies
  • Citing Article
  • September 2022

Politics