7,981
Views
10
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Forum on Climate Change and Critical Agrarian Studies

Climate change and class conflict in the Anthropocene: sink or swim together?

References

  • Adger, W. N. 2006. “Vulnerability.” Global Environmental Change 16 (3): 268–281.
  • Agbonifo, J. 2018. Environment and Conflict: The Place and Logic of Collective Action in the Niger Delta. London: Routledge.
  • Akbulut, B., F. Adaman, and Y. M. Madra. 2015. “The Decimation and Displacement of Development Economics.” Development and Change 46 (4): 733–761.
  • Akram-Lodhi, A. H. 2021. “The Ties That Bind? Agroecology and the Agrarian Question in the Twenty-First Century.” Journal of Peasant Studies 48 (4): 687–714.
  • Andreucci, D., & Zografos, C. 2022. Between Improvement and sacrifice: Othering and the (bio) Political Ecology of Climate Change. Political Geography, 92, Article 102512.
  • Anguelovski, I., and J. Martinez-Alier. 2014. “The ‘Environmentalism of the Poor’ Revisited: Territory and Place in Disconnected Glocal Struggles.” Ecological Economics 102: 167–176.
  • Arsel, M. 2003. Risk Society at Europe’s Periphery? The Case of the Bergama Resistance inTurkey1. Integrating and articulating environments: A challenge for northern and southern Europe, 3, 29.
  • Arsel, M., B. Akbulut, and F. Adaman. 2015. “Environmentalism of the Malcontent: Anatomy of an Anti-Coal Power Plant Struggle in Turkey.” Journal of Peasant Studies 42 (2): 371–395.
  • Arsel, M., and B. Büscher. 2012. “Nature™ Inc.: Changes and Continuities in Neoliberal Conservation and Market-Based Environmental Policy.” Development and Change 43 (1): 53–78.
  • Arsel, M., and A. Dasgupta. 2015. “Critique, Rediscovery and Revival in Development Studies.” Development and Change 46 (4): 644–665.
  • Arsel, M., L. Pellegrini, and C. Mena. 2019. “Maria’s Paradox and the Misery of Living Without Development Alternatives in the Ecuadorian Amazon.” In Immiserizing Growth: When Growth Fails the Poor, edited by R. Kanbur, R. Sandbrook, and P. Shafer, 203–225. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Battistoni, A. 2017. “Bringing in the Work of Nature: From Natural Capital to Hybrid Labor.” Political Theory 45 (1): 5–31.
  • Battistonni, A. 2022. “Is Sabotage a Pipe Dream?” In Property Will Cost Us the Earth Direct Action and the Future of the Global Climate Movement, edited by J. Kindig, 85. Verso Books.
  • Baviskar, A. 2003. “Between Violence and Desire: Space, Power, and Identity in the Making of Metropolitan Delhi.” International Social Science Journal 55 (175): 89–98.
  • Beck, U. 1992. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. London: Sage.
  • Beck, U. 2015. “Emancipatory Catastrophism: What Does it Mean to Climate Change and Risk Society?” Current Sociology 63 (1): 75–88.
  • Bennett, J. 2009. Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things. Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Benton, T. 1996. The Greening of Marxism. New York: The Guilford Press.
  • Bernstein, H. 2010. Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change. Halifax: Fernwood Press.
  • Bernstein, H., and T. J. Byres. 2001. “From Peasant Studies to Agrarian Change.” Journal of Agrarian Change 11): 5–56.
  • Biersack, A., and J. B. Greenberg. 2006. Reimagining Political Ecology. Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Bonneuil, C., and J. B. Fressoz. 2016. The Shock of the Anthropocene: The Earth, History and Us. London: Verso.
  • Bordiga, A. 1956. Drammi gialli e sinistri della moderna decadenza sociale. http://www.quinterna.org/archivio/1952_1970/drammi_gialli.htm
  • Borras Jr, S. M. 2009. “Agrarian Change and Peasant Studies: Changes, Continuities and Challenges–an Introduction.” Journal of Peasant Studies 36 (1): 5–31.
  • Borras Jr, S. M., I. Scoones, A. Baviskar, M. Edelman, N. L. Peluso, and W. Wolford. 2022. “Climate Change and Agrarian Struggles: An Invitation to Contribute to a JPS Forum.” Journal of Peasant Studies 49 (1): 1–28.
  • Bratman, E., T. Auch, and B. Stinchfield. 2022. “The Fracking Frontier in the United States: A Case Study of Foreign Investment, Civil Liberties and Land Ethics in the Shale Industry.” Development and Change 53 (3): 469–494.
  • Brenner, R. 1977. “The Origins of Capitalist Development: A Critique of neo-Smithian Marxism.” New Left Review 104: 25–92.
  • Buck, H. J. 2019. After Geoengineering: Climate Tragedy, Repair, and Restoration. London: Verso.
  • Burkett, P. 1999. “Natural Causes: Essays in Ecological Marxism.” Monthly Review 50 (9): 47–48.
  • Büscher, B., S. Sullivan, K. Neves, J. Igoe, and D. Brockington. 2012. “Towards a Synthesized Critique of Neoliberal Biodiversity Conservation.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 23 (2): 4–30.
  • Calhoun, C. 1993. ““New Social Movements” of the Early Nineteenth Century.” Social Science History 17 (3): 385–427.
  • Camargo, A. 2022. “Imagined Transitions: Agrarian Capitalism and Climate Change Adaptation in Colombia.” Journal of Peasant Studies 29 (4): 1–21.
  • Chakrabarty, D. 2009. “The Climate of History: Four Theses.” Critical Inquiry 35: 197–222.
  • Chakrabarty, D. 2017. “The Politics of Climate Change is More Than the Politics of Capitalism.” Theory, Culture & Society 34 (2-3): 25–37.
  • Chibber, V. 2006. “On the Decline of Class Analysis in South Asian Studies.” Critical Asian Studies 38 (4): 357–387.
  • Cousins, B. 2011. “What is a ‘Smallholder’? Class-Analytic Perspectives on Small-Scale Farming and Agrarian Reform in South Africa.” In Land and Resource Reform in South Africa: Impacts on Livelihoods, edited by P. Hebinck and C. Shackleton, 86–111. Abingdon: Routledge.
  • Crompton, R., and J. Scott. 1999. “Introduction: The State of Class Analysis.” The Sociological Review 47 (S2): 1–15.
  • Curran, D. 2013. “Risk Society and the Distribution of Bads: Theorizing Class in the Risk Society.” The British Journal of Sociology 64 (1): 44–62.
  • Curran, D. 2016. “Risk Society and Marxism: Beyond Simple Antagonism.” Journal of Classical Sociology 16 (3): 280–296.
  • Curran, D. 2018a. “Beck’s Creative Challenge to Class Analysis: From the Rejection of Class to the Discovery of Risk-Class.” Journal of Risk Research 21 (1): 29–40.
  • Curran, D. 2018b. “Environmental Justice Meets Risk-Class: The Relational Distribution of Environmental Bads.” Antipode 50 (2): 298–318.
  • Daniels, R. J., D. F. Kettle, and H. Kunreuther. 2006. On risk and disaster: Lessons from Hurricane Katrina. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Das, R. J. 2017. Marxist Class Theory for a Skeptical World. Leiden: Brill.
  • Davies, J. 2016. The Birth of the Anthropocene. Oakland, CA: University of California Press.
  • Davis, M. 2013. “Rethinking Class: The Lineage of the Socialist Register.” Socialist Register 50: 287–304.
  • Deaton, A. 2013. The Great Escape: Health, Wealth, and the Origins of Inequality. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Dwivedi, R. 1999. “Displacement, Risks and Resistance: Local Perceptions and Actions in the Sardar Sarovar.” Development and Change 30 (1): 43–78.
  • Eckersley, R. 1989. “Green Politics and the new Class: Selfishness or Virtue?” Political Studies 372: 205–223.
  • Fernandez-Salvador, C. 2018. ‘The Shuar and Large-Scale Mining in Zamora-Chinchipe, Ecuador’ PhD Dissertation. International Institute of Social Studies, The Hague.
  • Fischer, A. M. 2015. “The end of Peripheries? On the Enduring Relevance of Structuralism for Understanding Contemporary Global Development.” Development and Change 46 (4): 700–732.
  • Fontana, L. B. 2014. “Indigenous Peoples vs Peasant Unions: Land Conflicts and Rural Movements in Plurinational Bolivia.” Journal of Peasant Studies 41 (3): 297–319.
  • Foster, J. B. 1999. “Marx's Theory of Metabolic Rift: Classical Foundations for Environmental Sociology.” American Journal of Sociology 105 (2): 366–405.
  • Foster, J. B., B. Clark, and R. York. 2010. The Ecological Rift. New York: Monthly Review Press.
  • Franzen, A., and D. Vogl. 2013. “Two Decades of Measuring Environmental Attitudes: A Comparative Analysis of 33 Countries.” Global Environmental Change 23 (5): 1001–1008.
  • Friedmann, H. 2019. “The Awkward Class: A Foundation for Peasant Studies.” Journal of Peasant Studies 46 (5): 1096–1105.
  • Giugni, M., and M. T. Grasso. 2015. “Environmental Movements in Advanced Industrial Democracies: Heterogeneity, Transformation, and Institutionalization.” Annual Review of Environment and Resources 40: 337–361.
  • Goksen, F., F. Adaman, and EÜ Zenginobuz. 2002. “On Environmental Concern, Willingness to pay, and Postmaterialist Values: Evidence from Istanbul.” Environment and Behavior 34 (5): 616–633.
  • Goldblatt, D. 1996. Social Theory and the Environment. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Grusky, D. B., and J. B. Sørensen. 1998. “Can Class Analysis be Salvaged?” American Journal of Sociology 103 (5): 1187–1234.
  • Hale, C. R. 2005. “Neoliberal Multiculturalism.” PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review 28 (1): 10–19.
  • Harriss-White, B. 2018. “Awkward Classes and India's Development.” Review of Political Economy 30 (3): 355–376.
  • Henderson, J., R. P. Appelbaum, and S. Y. Ho. 2013. “Globalization with Chinese Characteristics: Externalization, Dynamics and Transformations.” Development and Change 44 (6): 1221–1253.
  • Hickman, L. 2010. James Lovelock: Humans are too stupid to prevent climate change. 29 March. https://www.theguardian.com/science/2010/mar/29/james-lovelock-climate-change
  • Horner, R., and D. Hulme. 2017. “From International to Global Development: New Geographies of 21st Century Development.” Development and Change 50 (2): 495–510.
  • Inglehart, R. 1981. “Post-materialism in an Environment of Insecurity.” American Political Science Review 75 (4): 880–900.
  • Inglehart, R., and S. C. Flanagan. 1987. “Value Change in Industrial Societies.” American Political Science Review 81 (4): 1289–1319.
  • Jänicke, M. 2008. “Ecological Modernisation: New Perspectives.” Journal of Cleaner Production 16 (5): 557–565.
  • Kallis, G. 2019. Limits: Why Malthus was Wrong and why Environmentalists Should Care. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Kiely, R. 2009. “The Globalization of Manufacturing Production: Warrenite Fantasies and Uneven and Unequal Realities.” In Peasants and Globalization: Political Economy, Rural Transformation and the Agrarian Question, edited by A. H. Akram-Lodhi and C. Kay, 169–189. London: Routledge.
  • Korhonen, J., A. Honkasalo, and J. Seppälä. 2018. “Circular Economy: The Concept and its Limitations.” Ecological Economics 143: 37–46.
  • Kovel, J. 1995. “Ecological Marxism and Dialectic.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (4): 31–50.
  • Laclau, E., and C. Mouffe. 1985. Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical Democratic Politics. London: Verso.
  • Latorre, S.. 2021. “The Role of Ecuadorian Working-Class Environmentalism in Promoting Environmental Justice: An Overview of the Hydrocarbon and Agricultural Sectors.” In The Palgrave Handbook of Environmental Labour Studies, edited by N. Räthzel, D. Stevis, and D. Uzzell, 271–294. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Latouche, S. 1993. In the Wake of the Affluent Society: An Exploration of Post-Development. London: Zed Books.
  • Lerche, J., and A. Shah. 2018. “Conjugated Oppression Within Contemporary Capitalism: Class, Caste, Tribe and Agrarian Change in India.” Journal of Peasant Studies 45 (5-6): 927–949.
  • Levien, M., M. Watts, and H. Yan. 2018. “Agrarian Marxism.” Journal of Peasant Studies 45 (5-6): 853–883.
  • Lo, A. Y. 2016. “National Income and Environmental Concern: Observations from 35 Countries.” Public Understanding of Science 25 (7): 873–890.
  • Malm, A. 2018. The Progress of This Storm: Nature and Society in a Warming World. London: Verso Books.
  • Malm, A. 2021. How to Blow up a Pipeline. London: Verso Books.
  • Mann, G., and J. Wainwright. 2019. “Political Scenarios for Climate Disaster.” Dissent 66 (3): 65–72.
  • Martinez-Alier, J. 1995. “The Environment as a Luxury Good or “Too Poor to be Green”?” Ecological Economics 13 (1): 1–10.
  • Martinez-Alier, J. 2009. “Social Metabolism, Ecological Distribution Conflicts, and Languages of Valuation.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 20 (1): 58–87.
  • Martinez-Alier, J., and R. Guha. 1997. Varieties of Environmentalism: Essays North and South. London: Earthscan.
  • Martinez-Alier, J., L. Temper, D. Del Bene, and A. Scheidel. 2016. “Is There a Global Environmental Justice Movement?” Journal of Peasant Studies 43 (3): 731–755.
  • Martínez-Alier, J., and M. O'Connor. 1995. Ecological and economic distribution conflicts (No. 321.95). Unitat de Fonaments de l'Anàlisi Econòmica (UAB) and Institut d'Anàlisi Econòmica (CSIC).
  • Mawdsley, E., D. Mehra, and K. Beazley. 2009. “Nature Lovers, Picnickers and Bourgeois Environmentalism.” Economic and Political Weekly XLIV (11): 49–59.
  • Maxwell, J., and F. Briscoe. 1997. “There's Money in the air: The CFC ban and DuPont's Regulatory Strategy.” Business Strategy and the Environment 6 (5): 276–286.
  • Melucci, A. 1988. Social movements and the democratization of everyday life.
  • Moore, J. W. 2015. Capitalism in the Web of Life: Ecology and the Accumulation of Capital. London: Verso Books.
  • Moore, J. W. 2018. “The Capitalocene Part II: Accumulation by Appropriation and the Centrality of Unpaid Work/Energy.” Journal of Peasant Studies 45 (2): 237–279.
  • Morris, I. 2010. Why the West Rules – for now: The Patterns of History and What They Reveal About the Future. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.
  • Mythen, G. 2021. “The Critical Theory of World Risk Society: A Retrospective Analysis.” Risk Analysis 41 (3): 533–543.
  • Neimark, B. D., and T. M. Healy. 2018. “Small-Scale Commodity Frontiers: The Bioeconomy Value Chain of Castor oil in Madagascar.” Journal of Agrarian Change 18 (3): 632–657.
  • Newell, P. 2022. “Climate Justice.” Journal of Peasant Studies 49 (5): 1–9.
  • Nixon, R. 2011. Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • O'Connor, J. 1988. “Capitalism, Nature, Socialism a Theoretical Introduction.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 1 (1): 11–38.
  • Offe, C. 1985. “New Social Movements: Challenging the Boundaries of Institutional Politics.” Social Research 52 (4): 817–868.
  • Parenti, C. 2015. “The 2013 ANTIPODE AAG Lecture The Environment Making State: Territory, Nature, and Value.” Antipode 47 (4): 829–848.
  • Patel, R., and J. W. Moore. 2017. A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things: A Guide to Capitalism, Nature, and the Future of the Planet. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Paterson, M. 2001. “Risky Business: Insurance Companies in Global Warming Politics.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (4): 18–42.
  • Peet, R., and M. Watts. 1996. Liberation Ecologies: Environment, Sustainability, and Environment in an Age of Market Triumphalsism. London: Routledge.
  • Pellegrini, L. 2012. “Joan Martinez-Alier.” Development and Change 43 (1): 341–359.
  • Pellegrini, L., and M. Arsel. 2018. “Oil and Conflict in the Ecuadorian Amazon.” European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies/Revista Europea de Estudios Latinoamericanos y del Caribe 106: 209–218.
  • Pichardo, N. A. 1997. “New Social Movements: A Critical Review.” Annual Review of Sociology 23 (1): 411–430.
  • Piketty, T. 2017. Capital in the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Polanyi, K. 1957. The Great Transformation: (The Political and Economic Origin of our Time). Boston, MA: Beacon Press.
  • Pye, O. 2021. “Agrarian Marxism and the Proletariat: A Palm oil Manifesto.” Journal of Peasant Studies 48 (4): 807–826.
  • Resnick, S., and R. Wolff. 2003. “The Diversity of Class Analyses: A Critique of Erik Olin Wright and Beyond.” Critical Sociology 29 (1): 7–27.
  • Rockström, J., W. Steffen, K. Noone, Å Persson, F. S. Chapin III, E. Lambin, T. M. Lenton, M. Scheffer, C. Folke, and H. J. Schellnhuber. 2009. “A Safeoperating Space for Humanity. Identifying and Quantifying Planetary Boundaries that must not be Transgressed could Help Prevent Human Activities from Causing Unacceptable Environmental Change.” Nature 461: 472–475.
  • Saez, E., and G. Zucman. 2016. “Wealth Inequality in the United States Since 1913: Evidence from Capitalized Income tax Data.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 131 (2): 519–578.
  • Saguin, K. 2016. “Blue Revolution in a Commodity Frontier: Ecologies of Aquaculture and Agrarian Change in Laguna Lake.” Philippines. Journal of Agrarian Change 16 (4): 571–593.
  • Salleh, A. 1995. “Nature, Woman, Labor, Capital: Living the Deepest Contradiction.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1): 21–39.
  • Schmitz, H., and I. Scoones. 2015. Accelerating Sustainability: Why Political Economy Matters. Report. 152, IDS, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.
  • Schneider, M. 2015. “What, Then, is a Chinese Peasant? Nongmin Discourses and Agroindustrialization in Contemporary China.” Agriculture and Human Values 32 (2): 331–346.
  • Scoones, I. 2016. “The Politics of Sustainability and Development.” Annual Review of Environment and Resources 41 (1): 293–319.
  • Sewell Jr, W. H. 1990. “How Classes are Made: Critical Reflections on EP Thompson's Theory of Working-Class Formation.” In EP Thompson: Critical Perspectives, edited by H. J. Kaye, and K. McClelland, 50–77. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  • Sherriff, L. 2015. One Young World Summit: ‘We Will Sink Or Swim Together’, Warns Kofi Annan Over Climate Change. Huffington Post UK. Accessed 11 February 2018. http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/11/19/we-will-sink-or-swim-together-warns-kofi-annan-climate-change_n_8597362.html
  • Shi, L., E. Chu, I. Anguelovski, A. Aylett, J. Debats, K. Goh, T. Schenk, K. C. Seto, D. Dodman, and D. Roberts. 2016. “Roadmap Towards Justice in Urban Climate Adaptation Research.” Nature Climate Change 6 (2): 131–137.
  • Silver, B. J., and S. S. Karatasli. 2015. “Historical Dynamics of Capitalism and Labor Movements.” In The Oxford Handbook of Social Movements, edited by D. Della Porta and M. Diani, 133–145. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Stern, N. 2007. The Economics of Climate Change: The Stern Review. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Svarstad, H., and T. A. Benjaminsen. 2020. “Reading Radical Environmental Justice Through a Political Ecology Lens.” Geoforum; Journal of Physical, Human, and Regional Geosciences 108: 1–11.
  • Swyngedouw, E. 1999. “Modernity and Hybridity: Nature, Regeneracionismo, and the Production of the Spanish Waterscape, 1890-1930.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 89 (3): 443–465.
  • Swyngedouw, E. 2013. “Apocalypse now! Fear and Doomsday Pleasures.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 24 (1): 9–18.
  • Thompson, E. P. 1971. “The Moral Economy of the English Crowd in the Eighteenth Century.” Past & Present 50: 76–136.
  • van der Ploeg, J. D. 2020. “Farmers’ Upheaval, Climate Crisis and Populism.” Journal of Peasant Studies 47 (3): 589–605.
  • Veltmeyer, H. 1997. “New Social Movements in Latin America: The Dynamics of Class and Identity.” Journal of Peasant Studies 25 (1): 139–169.
  • Wainwright, J. 2020. “How Not to Think About Climate Change.” GeoHumanities 6 (1): 205–214.
  • Wright, E. O. 1996. “The Continuing Relevance of Class Analysis.” Theory and Society 25: 693–716.
  • Wright, E. O. 1997. Class Counts: Comparative Studies in Class Analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Wright, E. O. 1999. Foundations of class analysis: A Marxist perspective. annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Chicago.
  • Wright, E. O. 2019. How to be an Anti-Capitalist in the Twenty-First Century. New York: Verso Books.
  • Wynne, B. 1994. “May the Sheep Safely Graze? A Reflexive View of the Expert-Lay Knowledge Divide.” In Risk Environment and Modernity: Towards an New Ecology, edited by S. Lash, S. Bronislaw, and B. Wynne, 44–83. London: Sage.