TY - JOUR
T1 - Is there a global environmental justice movement?
AU - Martinez-Alier, Joan
AU - Temper, Leah
AU - Del Bene, Daniela
AU - Scheidel, Arnim
PY - 2016/5/3
Y1 - 2016/5/3
N2 - © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. One of the causes of the increasing number of ecological distribution conflicts around the world is the changing metabolism of the economy in terms of growing flows of energy and materials. There are conflicts on resource extraction, transport and waste disposal. Therefore, there are many local complaints, as shown in the Atlas of Environmental Justice (EJatlas) and other inventories. And not only complaints; there are also many successful examples of stopping projects and developing alternatives, testifying to the existence of a rural and urban global movement for environmental justice. Moreover, since the 1980s and 1990s, this movement has developed a set of concepts and campaign slogans to describe and intervene in such conflicts. They include environmental racism, popular epidemiology, the environmentalism of the poor and the indigenous, biopiracy, tree plantations are not forests, the ecological debt, climate justice, food sovereignty, land grabbing and water justice, among other concepts. These terms were born from socio-environmental activism, but sometimes they have also been taken up by academic political ecologists and ecological economists who, for their part, have contributed other concepts to the global environmental justice movement, such as ‘ecologically unequal exchange’ or the ‘ecological footprint’.
AB - © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. One of the causes of the increasing number of ecological distribution conflicts around the world is the changing metabolism of the economy in terms of growing flows of energy and materials. There are conflicts on resource extraction, transport and waste disposal. Therefore, there are many local complaints, as shown in the Atlas of Environmental Justice (EJatlas) and other inventories. And not only complaints; there are also many successful examples of stopping projects and developing alternatives, testifying to the existence of a rural and urban global movement for environmental justice. Moreover, since the 1980s and 1990s, this movement has developed a set of concepts and campaign slogans to describe and intervene in such conflicts. They include environmental racism, popular epidemiology, the environmentalism of the poor and the indigenous, biopiracy, tree plantations are not forests, the ecological debt, climate justice, food sovereignty, land grabbing and water justice, among other concepts. These terms were born from socio-environmental activism, but sometimes they have also been taken up by academic political ecologists and ecological economists who, for their part, have contributed other concepts to the global environmental justice movement, such as ‘ecologically unequal exchange’ or the ‘ecological footprint’.
KW - activist knowledge
KW - climate justice
KW - collaborative research
KW - ecological distribution conflicts
KW - EJatlas
KW - environmental justice
KW - environmental racism
KW - environmentalism of the poor
KW - statistical political ecology
U2 - 10.1080/03066150.2016.1141198
DO - 10.1080/03066150.2016.1141198
M3 - Article
SN - 0306-6150
VL - 43
SP - 731
EP - 755
JO - Journal of Peasant Studies
JF - Journal of Peasant Studies
IS - 3
ER -