Dear GEP Colleagues & Friends:
With apologies for self-promotion, this new publication (co-authored with Rosaleen Duffy, Francis Massé, Adeniyi Asiyanbi, & Esther Marijnen) may be helpful for your courses this fall.
This article was commissioned by and headlines the next issue of Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, which is using this article to headline their next issue. It seeks to present an evidence-based critique of the dominant models of global conservation and offers outlines of reimagining environmentalism beyond the aestheticization of environment and the (mostly unintended) romanticizing of indigenous visions of environmentalism. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00139157.2021.1924574
For situations in which one does not have institutionalized access to the full-text, I have put the full-text PDF in this publicly accessible folder, which also contains two other teaching-friendly articles on Climate Justice and Planetary Justice (Co-authored with Frank Biermann, Aarti Gupta, and Chuks Okereke) https://www.dropbox.com/sh/0khzymm4o1pyh9s/AACctTBrEI7xYeozEgJIGaeOa?dl=0
My best wishes,
Prakash
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Prakash Kashwan, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Connecticut
Co-Director, Research Program on Economic and Social Rights, Human Rights Institute
Editor, Environmental Politics
Vice Chair/Program Chair, Environmental Studies Section, International Studies Association (ISA)
University of Connecticut
365 Fairfield Way, Storrs, CT 06269
Phone: 860-486-7951
https://kashwan.net/