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This Handbook aims to provide a unique and convenient one-volume
reference work, exhibiting the latest interdisciplinary
explorations in this urgently burgeoning field of intellectual and
practical importance. Due to its immense range and diversity,
environmental politics and theory necessarily encompasses:
empirical, normative, policy, political, organizational, and
activist discussions unfolding across many disciplines. It is a
challenge for its practitioners, let alone newcomers, to keep
informed about the ongoing developments in this fast-changing area
of study and to comprehend all of their implications. Through the
planned volume's extensive scope of contributions emphasizing
environmental policy issues, normative prescriptions, and
implementation strategies, the next generation of thinkers and
activists will have very useful profiles of the theories, concepts,
organizations, and movements central to environmental politics and
theory. It is the editors' aspiration that this volume will become
a go-to resource on the myriad perspectives relevant to studying
and improving the environment for advanced researchers as well as
an introduction to new students seeking to understand the basic
foundations and recommended resolutions to many of our
environmental challenges. Environmental politics is more than
theory alone, so the Handbook also considers theory-action
connections by highlighting the past and current: thinkers,
activists, social organizations, and movements that have worked to
guide contemporary societies toward a more environmentally
sustainable and just global order. Chapter "Eco-Anxiety and the
Responses of Ecological Citizenship and Mindfulness" is available
open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
License via link.springer.com.
The contributors to this volume focus on the political and value
issues that, in their shared view, underlie the global
environmental crisis facing us today. They argue that only by
transforming our dominant values, social institutions and way of
living can we avoid ecological disaster.
The contributors to this volume focus on the political and value
issues that, in their shared view, underlie the global
environmental crisis facing us today. They argue that only by
transforming our dominant values, social institutions and way of
living can we avoid ecological disaster.
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