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The International Handbook of Political Ecology features chapters
by leading scholars from around the world in a unique collection
exploring the multi-disciplinary field of political ecology. This
landmark volume canvasses key developments, topics, issues, debates
and concepts showcasing how political ecologists today address
pressing social and environmental concerns. Introductory chapters
provide an overview of political ecology and the Handbook.
Remaining chapters examine five broad themes: issues and
approaches; governance and power; knowledge and discourse; method
and scale; and connections and transformations. The authors focus
on an intrinsically international endeavour, considering both the
topic and source of research, and integrate the approaches,
debates, concepts and methods that define the field
internationally. A combination of general reflection and case study
research demonstrates both political ecology's place in wider
social science debates and trends, as well as how its concerns
relate to diverse empirical problems and settings. Across diverse
topics and perspectives, these chapters amount to a wide-ranging
survey of current research, making the International Handbook an
indispensable reference for scholars and students in political
ecology. Contributors: A. Acharya, B. Agarwal, H. Alimonda, A.
Asiyanbi, L. Baker, S. Barca, S. Batterbury, P. Blaikie, E. Bravo,
R.L. Bryant, B. Buscher, G. Cederloef, D. Chartier, C.A. Claus, L.
Cortesi, A. Doolittle, M.R. Dove, W. Dressler, R. Fletcher, T.
Forsyth, T.A.M. Freitas, D. Gautier, B. Hautdidier, A.
Hayes-Conroy, J. Hayes-Conroy, H. Healy, C. Hebdon, L. Jarosz, S.
Joshi, G. Kallis, A.H. Kimura, T. Kizos, C.A. Kull, P. Le Billon,
S. Lee, E. Leff, A. Loftus, J. Martinez-Alier, B.R. Middleton, M.
Moreano, A.C. Salomao Mozine, J. Muldavin, S. Nair, H. Neo, R.P.
Neumann, C. Noe, G.G. Nunez, A. Paniagua, N.L. Peluso, C.P. Pow, M.
Ramutsindel
First published in 1997. An introductory text on environmental
management with a global coverage, including attention paid to the
Third World. The perspective of the book is geographical and the
treatment draws on the broad and complementary experience of the
two authors.
First published in 1997. An introductory text on environmental
management with a global coverage, including attention paid to the
Third World. The perspective of the book is geographical and the
treatment draws on the broad and complementary experience of the
two authors.
The International Handbook of Political Ecology features chapters
by leading scholars from around the world in a unique collection
exploring the multi-disciplinary field of political ecology. This
landmark volume canvasses key developments, topics, issues, debates
and concepts showcasing how political ecologists today address
pressing social and environmental concerns. Introductory chapters
provide an overview of political ecology and the Handbook.
Remaining chapters examine five broad themes: issues and
approaches; governance and power; knowledge and discourse; method
and scale; and connections and transformations. The authors focus
on an intrinsically international endeavour, considering both the
topic and source of research, and integrate the approaches,
debates, concepts and methods that define the field
internationally. A combination of general reflection and case study
research demonstrates both political ecology's place in wider
social science debates and trends, as well as how its concerns
relate to diverse empirical problems and settings. Across diverse
topics and perspectives, these chapters amount to a wide-ranging
survey of current research, making the International Handbook an
indispensable reference for scholars and students in political
ecology. Contributors: A. Acharya, B. Agarwal, H. Alimonda, A.
Asiyanbi, L. Baker, S. Barca, S. Batterbury, P. Blaikie, E. Bravo,
R.L. Bryant, B. Buscher, G. Cederloef, D. Chartier, C.A. Claus, L.
Cortesi, A. Doolittle, M.R. Dove, W. Dressler, R. Fletcher, T.
Forsyth, T.A.M. Freitas, D. Gautier, B. Hautdidier, A.
Hayes-Conroy, J. Hayes-Conroy, H. Healy, C. Hebdon, L. Jarosz, S.
Joshi, G. Kallis, A.H. Kimura, T. Kizos, C.A. Kull, P. Le Billon,
S. Lee, E. Leff, A. Loftus, J. Martinez-Alier, B.R. Middleton, M.
Moreano, A.C. Salomao Mozine, J. Muldavin, S. Nair, H. Neo, R.P.
Neumann, C. Noe, G.G. Nunez, A. Paniagua, N.L. Peluso, C.P. Pow, M.
Ramutsindel
Why are nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) so successful in
today's world? How do they empower themselves? This insightful book
provides important new perspectives on the strategic thinking of
NGOs, the way they identify themselves, and how they behave.
Raymond L. Bryant develops a novel theoretical perspective around
the concept of moral capital and assesses that concept through
in-depth case studies of NGOs in the Philippines. such perceptions
can translate into social power. Bryant examines the ambiguous
qualities of NGO strategising, the ways in which the quest for
moral capital is bedevilled by the need to compromise with
political and economic elites, and the possibilities for NGOs to
achieve political goals as moral leaders. in the Philippines and,
more significantly, in terms of the contribution it makes to wider
debates about NGOs. Jonathan Rigg, University of Durham
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