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In this section of the seminar, we
call for more detailed attention to the hidden ecologies
of globalization and development. We will attempt to
make sense of the debates surrounding the environment
by investigating both the ecology of politics and the
politics of ecology. We will examine the ways in which
ecological conditions have influenced the historical
development of social structures and institutions, by
imposing challenges and opportunities for meeting basic
needs. Highly variable histories and geographies of
environmental degradation clearly pose unique difficulties
for different regions and states and complicate the
macro-scale definition and regulation of environmental
problems. At the same time, we will examine the ways
in which politics -- particularly hierarchy, privilege,
status, and power -- shape the nature of environmental
problems and proposed solutions. In doing so, it will
become clear that attempts to privilege public versus
private governance, collective versus individual ownership,
or top-down versus participatory implementations all
turn on very different understandings of the modern
political and ecological subject.
Case Studies and Comparative Projects:
We will investigate the similarities and differences
across the following cases: migration and deforestation
in the sensitive eco-systems of the South American tropical
rainforest; conflict-ridden environments in mining regions
of South Africa; environment-development “trade-offs”
in developing economies of China, India, and Eastern
Europe; environmental justice campaigns in the United
States, including the case of Hurricane Katrina; and
anti-nuclear energy struggles in France. We will also
analyze the rise of collective action around environmental
problems, such as the anti-nuclear movement in France
and the Environmental Justice Movement in the United
States. We will explore the role of NGOs, public action
litigation and the rule of law in adjudicating these
collective struggles. Although these are very different
cases of environmental marginalization and mobilization,
the comparisons will shed light on the historical and
social context in which relationships between people
and their environments are constituted. They will provide
a window onto contemporary ecologies of globalization
and development.
Theme leader:
Robert Healy, Professor of Environmental Policy at the
Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences,
Duke University
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