Political Ecology of Common People
portes grátis
Political Ecology of Common People
Bidet, Jacques
Taylor & Francis Ltd
01/2025
184
Mole
9781032512907
Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: What is to be done in the age of disaster?
Preamble: the "metastructural turn"
Part I: Capitalism and the State, the World-System and the Class World-State
1. The Modern Ecological Class Structure
1.1. Capital as a social-ecological fact
1.2. Competence as a social-ecological fact
1.3. The "fundamental" or "popular" class: the class of the "common people"
2. Class Violence and National Violence
2.1. The nation-state and its regimes of hegemony
2.2. From the Nation to the System of Nations
2.3. The political intertwining of class-colony/gender
3. World-System, World-State, World-Nation
3.1. The Nation-State within the World-System
3.2. Beyond the World-System: the World-State
3.3. Towards the World-Nation?
Part II: Citizens of a World-Nation, Residents of the Planet
4. Social Domination Alone Is Destroying the Planet
4.1. The order of battle
4.2. Unthought aspects of productivism and consumerism
4.3. On the right and proper use of the planet
5. Only Struggles for Liberation Can Protect the Planet
5.1. Class struggles as ecological struggles
5.2. Gender and Global-South struggles as ecological struggles
6. The World-Nation, the Ultimate Ecological Community
6.1. The nation as the ultimate figure of the common
6.2. Humanity, the ultimate nation
6.3. A national politics for humanity
6.4. Epilogue: a community of the living?
Preamble: the "metastructural turn"
Part I: Capitalism and the State, the World-System and the Class World-State
1. The Modern Ecological Class Structure
1.1. Capital as a social-ecological fact
1.2. Competence as a social-ecological fact
1.3. The "fundamental" or "popular" class: the class of the "common people"
2. Class Violence and National Violence
2.1. The nation-state and its regimes of hegemony
2.2. From the Nation to the System of Nations
2.3. The political intertwining of class-colony/gender
3. World-System, World-State, World-Nation
3.1. The Nation-State within the World-System
3.2. Beyond the World-System: the World-State
3.3. Towards the World-Nation?
Part II: Citizens of a World-Nation, Residents of the Planet
4. Social Domination Alone Is Destroying the Planet
4.1. The order of battle
4.2. Unthought aspects of productivism and consumerism
4.3. On the right and proper use of the planet
5. Only Struggles for Liberation Can Protect the Planet
5.1. Class struggles as ecological struggles
5.2. Gender and Global-South struggles as ecological struggles
6. The World-Nation, the Ultimate Ecological Community
6.1. The nation as the ultimate figure of the common
6.2. Humanity, the ultimate nation
6.3. A national politics for humanity
6.4. Epilogue: a community of the living?
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
ecology;ecological struggle;capital;capitalism;class struggle;social struggle;consumption;exploitation;domination;Marx;political theory;social theory;sustainability
Introduction: What is to be done in the age of disaster?
Preamble: the "metastructural turn"
Part I: Capitalism and the State, the World-System and the Class World-State
1. The Modern Ecological Class Structure
1.1. Capital as a social-ecological fact
1.2. Competence as a social-ecological fact
1.3. The "fundamental" or "popular" class: the class of the "common people"
2. Class Violence and National Violence
2.1. The nation-state and its regimes of hegemony
2.2. From the Nation to the System of Nations
2.3. The political intertwining of class-colony/gender
3. World-System, World-State, World-Nation
3.1. The Nation-State within the World-System
3.2. Beyond the World-System: the World-State
3.3. Towards the World-Nation?
Part II: Citizens of a World-Nation, Residents of the Planet
4. Social Domination Alone Is Destroying the Planet
4.1. The order of battle
4.2. Unthought aspects of productivism and consumerism
4.3. On the right and proper use of the planet
5. Only Struggles for Liberation Can Protect the Planet
5.1. Class struggles as ecological struggles
5.2. Gender and Global-South struggles as ecological struggles
6. The World-Nation, the Ultimate Ecological Community
6.1. The nation as the ultimate figure of the common
6.2. Humanity, the ultimate nation
6.3. A national politics for humanity
6.4. Epilogue: a community of the living?
Preamble: the "metastructural turn"
Part I: Capitalism and the State, the World-System and the Class World-State
1. The Modern Ecological Class Structure
1.1. Capital as a social-ecological fact
1.2. Competence as a social-ecological fact
1.3. The "fundamental" or "popular" class: the class of the "common people"
2. Class Violence and National Violence
2.1. The nation-state and its regimes of hegemony
2.2. From the Nation to the System of Nations
2.3. The political intertwining of class-colony/gender
3. World-System, World-State, World-Nation
3.1. The Nation-State within the World-System
3.2. Beyond the World-System: the World-State
3.3. Towards the World-Nation?
Part II: Citizens of a World-Nation, Residents of the Planet
4. Social Domination Alone Is Destroying the Planet
4.1. The order of battle
4.2. Unthought aspects of productivism and consumerism
4.3. On the right and proper use of the planet
5. Only Struggles for Liberation Can Protect the Planet
5.1. Class struggles as ecological struggles
5.2. Gender and Global-South struggles as ecological struggles
6. The World-Nation, the Ultimate Ecological Community
6.1. The nation as the ultimate figure of the common
6.2. Humanity, the ultimate nation
6.3. A national politics for humanity
6.4. Epilogue: a community of the living?
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.