512 results on '"Environmental destruction"'
Search Results
2. Investigating the impact of the internet on managing green financial innovation and improving agricultural conditions in water-scarce Asian regions using ANN modeling
- Author
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Xiaohan Sheng and Guangmin Liu
- Subjects
Agriculture ,Management strategies ,Environmentally friendly innovations ,Green innovation ,Environmental destruction ,Digital agriculture ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract This research focuses on the importance of management strategies, green innovation, and sustainable practices in the agricultural sector. These factors are crucial for job creation, food security, and environmental conservation. Particularly in water-scarce regions, effective management is necessary to overcome natural resource constraints and encourage a shift towards digital agriculture (AGRI). The study aims to identify and analyze the challenges and issues related to agricultural research and technology in Asian countries. The collected data were analyzed using exploratory factor analysis in the SPSS software. The analysis revealed a range of issues and challenges for agricultural development, including those related to the structure and policy framework, the availability and quality of resources and infrastructures, and the provision of effective support services, all of which encompassed factors such as research and technology investment, research management, productivity, research culture, networking, and the integration of higher education and agricultural research. To estimate the efficiency of technology development, agricultural development, and support services for AGRI, an artificial neural network (ANN) was utilized. The ANN was trained by incorporating changes in management strategies, green innovation, and sustainability across a broader range of experimental scenarios. The evaluation of the ANN's predictions showed that improvements in management strategies and the adoption of green innovation and sustainability significantly impacted the productivity of technology development, agricultural development, and support services for AGRI. The accuracy of the ANN's predictions was further assessed using linear regression. The results indicated an acceptable level of error when compared to the target results obtained from experimental tests. Overall, this study emphasizes the importance of effective management, green innovation, and sustainable practices in driving advancements in technology and agricultural development.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Environmental Destruction and Colonialism in Amitav Ghosh's The Nutmeg's Curse.
- Author
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Khandelwal, Astha and Dhand, Deepika
- Subjects
RESOURCE exploitation ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,NUTMEG tree ,POSTCOLONIAL literature ,COLONIZATION - Abstract
Amitav Ghosh's The Nutmeg's Curse explores the deep connections between colonialism, capitalism, and environmental destruction, offering a critique of how these forces have shaped the modern ecological crisis. By tracing the history of the nutmeg trade in the 17th century and the violent Dutch colonization of the Banda Islands, Ghosh links the exploitation of natural resources during colonial times to contemporary ecological degradation. This paper examines how Ghosh uses storytelling as a form of resistance, blending personal, historical, and cultural narratives to highlight the interconnectedness of environmental and human violence. Ghosh critiques the Anthropocene, arguing that its roots lie in centuries of colonial exploitation and capitalist expansion, which continue to harm marginalized communities and ecosystems. Through comparisons with his other work, The Great Derangement, and postcolonial ecological literature by authors like Arundhati Roy and Vandana Shiva, Ghosh's arguments are situated within a broader literary context. Ultimately, this paper contends that The Nutmeg's Curse calls for a radical rethinking of humanity's relationship with nature and the global economy, offering important insights into contemporary environmental and geopolitical debates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
4. Man-Land Equation in Abdel-Fattah's Where The Streets Had A Name: An Eco-Critical Study.
- Author
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Wajid, Hamna, Qamar, Sadia, and Shaheen, Aamer
- Subjects
ECOCRITICISM ,COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,PALESTINIANS ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation - Abstract
This research paper is about the contemporary issues of migration, place-attachment and trauma in Randa Abdel-Fattah's novel Where The Streets Had A Name (2008). The novel is centered on the lives of displaced Palestinians from their native land. The novel has been analyzed through Lawrence Buell's concept of space, place and imagination. The theory of Eco-criticism is built in large part around the concept of raising awareness about natural world. The forceful migration of people from their native land causes trauma and constant longing to return to their homeland. The paper illustrates that the displaced Palestinians are connected to their land. They all share same culture, traditions, and history so they feel connected to each other and to their land. The paper is also valuable for social awakening as it aims at sensitizing the human race towards the environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Bankruptcy Application by Prosecutor on The Basis of Public Interest as Result of Environmental Destruction Sanction
- Author
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Jamila, Fadilla, Rompegading, Melantik, Striełkowski, Wadim, Editor-in-Chief, Black, Jessica M., Series Editor, Butterfield, Stephen A., Series Editor, Chang, Chi-Cheng, Series Editor, Cheng, Jiuqing, Series Editor, Dumanig, Francisco Perlas, Series Editor, Al-Mabuk, Radhi, Series Editor, Scheper-Hughes, Nancy, Series Editor, Urban, Mathias, Series Editor, Webb, Stephen, Series Editor, Umiyati, Mirsa, editor, Budiartha, I Nyoman Putu, editor, Saptomo, Ade, editor, Verhezen, Peter, editor, Idris, Siti Hafsyah, editor, Soares, Cesaltina Angela, editor, Lisdiyono, Eddy, editor, Santiago, Faisal, editor, Pratomo, Eddy, editor, Sudiro, Ahmad, editor, and Susanto, Anthon Freddy, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Sustainability Futures : Rebuilding Relationships with Nature
- Author
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Kalsoom, Qudsia, Hasan, Sibte, Leal Filho, Walter, editor, Azul, Anabela Marisa, editor, Doni, Federica, editor, and Salvia, Amanda Lange, editor
- Published
- 2023
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7. Epilogue
- Author
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Lodén, Torbjörn, Peppoloni, Silvia, Editor-in-Chief, Bilham, Nic, Series Editor, Bobrowsky, Peter T., Series Editor, Cronin, Vincent S., Series Editor, Di Capua, Giuseppe, Series Editor, Stewart, Iain, Series Editor, Sá, Artur, Series Editor, Preiser, Rika, Series Editor, and Oosterbeek, Luiz, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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8. Investigating the impact of the internet on managing green financial innovation and improving agricultural conditions in water-scarce Asian regions using ANN modeling
- Author
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Sheng, Xiaohan and Liu, Guangmin
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Snapshot.
- Author
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Chanin, Natalie, Rausch, Robert, Dickens, Marquetta, Vazquez, Turcois, Cook, Justin, Thomas, Bryan, May, Megan, Adler, Jenny, Greer, Jerry Dickson, Doyle, Rory, Painter, Jocelyn, Roach, Beth, Emanuel, Ryan, Kippelen, Virginie, Norton, Anna Gage, Hemard, Chuck, Dimmitt, Benjamin, Davidson, Cameron, Charlot, Vanessa, and Foster, Jerod
- Subjects
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ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *COASTAL changes , *GIANT perch , *DILL , *LILIES - Abstract
The Snapshot: Climate issue of Southern Cultures includes photography and reflections on climate impacts across the southern states by Jenny Adler, Austin Anthony, Kate Auger, Arden Barnes, Monica Patrice Barra, Robin Boggs, Jared Bramblett, Lily Brooks, Hannah Brown, Becca Burton, Matthew Busch, Gordon Campbell, Natalie Chanin, Vanessa Charlot, Walter Coker, Justin Cook, Cameron Davidson, Marquetta Dickens, Brandon Dill, Benjamin Dimmitt, Rory Doyle, Ryan Emanuel, Cameron Evans, J Henry Fair, Megan Faust, Annie Flanagan, Kathleen Flynn, Jerod Foster, John Gaulden, Hermina Glass-Hill, Allison Grant, Jerry Dickson Greer, Joshua Dudley Greer, Anna Hamilton, Virginia Hanusik, John Lusk Hathaway, Chuck Hemard, Tom Kimmerer, Virginie Kippelen, Jeremy M. Lange, Nate Larson, Mark Long, Jordan Lovejoy, Megan May, Roger May, Lisette Morales McCabe, Rob McDonald, Andrew Moore, Stephen B. Morton, Anna Gage Norton, Jocelyn Painter, Elena Peterman, Daniel Pullen, Tom Rankin, Robert Rausch, Jeff Rich, Beth Roach, Derek Slagle, Michael O. Snyder, Michael K. Steinberg, Bryan Thomas, Jacqui Thurlow-Lippisch, Simon Tye, Turcois Vazquez, Jordan Vonderhaar, Jason Matthew Walker, Will Warasila, Carlton Ward Jr. Brooke White, William Widmer, and Devin Wright. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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10. Ecocritical Wisdom for Ecojustice: The Quintessence of Human Existence.
- Author
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Swaminathan, Bavetra and Chakravarthy, Ravi
- Abstract
Ecocriticism is a theory that studies the relationship between humans and non-humans critically. The perception becomes the need of the hour as it stresses the interconnectedness between humans and Nature in the era of environmental sabotage. As Barbara Ward says, 'We have forgotten how to be good guests, how to walk lightly on the earth as its other creatures do' rather, humans pollute and erode the Natural elements. The interdependency between the environment and humans should be understood to lead to a better quality of life. Ecocriticism amidst the global crisis strives to reattach humans to their natural world. This article, stressing the significance of entwined movements like ecofeminism, eco-theology, ecosophy, and so on, shows realistic evidence to bring out the emergency to discuss, understand and practice the idea of Ecocriticism out in the practical world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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11. Expanding and protecting human rights from space
- Author
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Bales, Kevin
- Published
- 2024
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12. Buddhist Economics: A Guide to Creating an Equitable, Sustainable, Caring Market Economy
- Author
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Brown, Clair, Brink, Alexander, Series Editor, Rendtorff, Jacob Dahl, Series Editor, Boatright, John, Editorial Board Member, Brenkert, George, Editorial Board Member, Chan, Allan K. K., Editorial Board Member, Cowton, Christopher, Editorial Board Member, George, Richard T. de, Editorial Board Member, Elster, Jon, Editorial Board Member, Etzioni, Amitai, Editorial Board Member, Pies, Ingo, Editorial Board Member, Haase, Michaela, Editorial Board Member, Hoevel, Carlos, Editorial Board Member, Shionoya, Yuichi, Editorial Board Member, Van Parijs, Philippe, Editorial Board Member, Rossouw, Gedeon J., Editorial Board Member, Wieland, Josef, Editorial Board Member, Dion, Michel, editor, and Pava, Moses, editor
- Published
- 2022
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13. Note on Journal Extracts 2017–2020: Followed by Extracts from Handwritten Journals
- Author
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Kinsella, John, Herd, David, Series Editor, and Kinsella, John
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Expanding the Jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court
- Author
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Iman Prihandono and Dewi Santoso Yuniarti
- Subjects
environmental destruction ,international criminal court ,security council ,Law in general. Comparative and uniform law. Jurisprudence ,K1-7720 - Abstract
Environmental destruction and exploitation of natural resources are some of the main causes of humanitarian conflicts, which are often international in scale. One instance was the crime of genocide conducted by Al-Bashir, which was triggered by exploitation of natural resources (resource war), causing pollution of vital water sources, and ending with conflict in Darfur, Sudan. This case is evidence that environmental destruction can be a driving factor for crimes against humanity. In response to this, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued a Policy Paper, which sets out considerations to prosecute cases of environmental destruction and illegal exploitation of natural resources, which is referred to by some as ecocide. With growing demand of the international community, not only natural persons, but corporations are urged to be prosecuted before the ICC for ecocide. This research is normative legal research. It is intended to outline the current rise of demand for the ICC to prosecute cases of ecocide, whilst challenging the existing jurisdiction of the ICC based on the Rome Statute. This paper will discuss whether the ICC have jurisdiction to adjudicate ecocide, expanding the Court’s jurisdiction to prosecute corporations, and crimes conducted in and/or by citizens of States that are not members of the Rome Statute, such as Indonesia. This paper concludes with constructive recommendations for businesses to start re-evaluating their business plans to put environment and human rights awareness into priority concern.
- Published
- 2022
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15. 'When Everything was Forest': Aikanã Histories and Environmental Destruction in Southern Amazonia
- Author
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Lisa Grund
- Subjects
Oral history ,memory ,environmental destruction ,indigenous people ,Amazon ,Social Sciences - Abstract
This article explores how the Aikanã, speakers of an isolate language, who live in the south-eastern Amazon, in the Brazilian State of Rondônia, make sense of the drastic transformations brought about by the colonisation of this region. Through an analysis of Aikanã narratives and life histories, the article highlights how Aikanã social memory gives meaning to experiences of contact, land loss and environmental destruction. It will contemplate the temporal markers, i.e. periodisations that occur in narratives and life histories and that delineate Aikanã historicity. These temporal markers refer predominantly to an experienced past between the beginning of the 20th century and the present, from a distant period of displacement from their traditional territory and the severe loss of human lives to the transformation of the forest into pastures for cattle and soy. In this vein, temporal markers are also anchored in space, unveiling sentiments of nostalgia and ecological grief for a past fertility of social life, interconnected with the fertility of the more-than-human world of the lost forest. Exploring Aikanã narrativity and its operation in the construction of social memory, the article aims to contribute to contemporary debates on Amazonian historicities, as well as to the theoretical and political role of Amazonian socialities in face of the current environmental crisis.
- Published
- 2023
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16. Construcción de planta de fertilizantes en sitio Ramsar, implementación de política pública para el cuidado y preservación, Topolobampo Sinaloa, México.
- Author
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Rivera González, Oscar Daniel and Teresa Rodríguez Van Gort, Mary Frances
- Abstract
The article presents the result of an investigation and explains the current problems of the construction of a fertilizer plant in the bay of Topolobampo, Sinaloa, established by Gas y Petroquímica de Occidente, a Mexican subsidiary of the Swiss-German Holding Proman, which will generate anhydrous ammonia as a fertilizer input, and therefore, the need to implement real protection based on public policies focused on the preservation of the bay, which is a Ramsar site. The construction of the plant began in 2014; forging confrontations with residents canceling its construction. Therefore, we detail the impacts in case of construction of the plant, proposing protection of the bay based on public policies for the benefit of the site. Keywords: Fertilizers, ammonia, Ramsar, environmental destruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Drought: Parlour Song (2008)
- Author
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McEvoy, Sean and McEvoy, Sean
- Published
- 2021
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18. Dark feet and dark wings: penetrating the depths of the Earth.
- Author
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Zeiger, Robin B.
- Abstract
The author, although an analyst, is an initiate into the topic of environmental destruction. Following Wendell Berry, she enters the dark and begins a journey of dream-like reflection, weaving images from her own dream and drawing on the work of Vaughan, Bernstein, Soloveitchik and Sacks. She asks, 'not if but where does climate change enter the room?'. The second half of the paper focuses on the manifestations of environmental destruction in dreams and sandplay from three patients and one dream group participant. The paper argues that the analyst must see and intuit before our patients can access the objective layer of environmental destruction in dreams and symbolic material. In this way, the climate becomes the wounded patient, and the analyst as wounded healer must first access his/her own relationship to the wounds inside. Finally, using an ancient Jewish mythological story of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, the author argues that Jungian analysts must work to find balance between the inner world of depth psychology and the outer world with its challenges and problems that include environmental destruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. Role Of Nature In T.S Eliot’s The Hollow Men (1925) - An Eco-Critical Study.
- Author
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Fatima, Tahseen, Saim, Hafiz Abdullah, and Afzal, Arooba
- Subjects
- *
CRITICAL theory , *QUALITATIVE research , *WAR , *RESEARCH methodology , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *ECOLOGY - Abstract
Eco criticism is a critical theory that has the center of attention to studying the relationship between literature and the environment. This research paper identifies deep-rooted causes that arise when society comes into interaction with Nature. The main proponent of this theory was Cheryll Glotfelty who was the editor of the famous book “The Eco-critical Reader”. Ecocriticism is a neologism term in the field of literature. Ecology is the science of nature and its connection with humanity. It is a multidisciplinary study that focuses on sustainability and the existence of man. The present study aims to study The Hollow Men (1925) by T.S Eliot, which draws the picture of the hollowed world after world war. The poem under study has major concern for society and culture which are suffering from a lack of belief, optimistic approach, righteousness, ethics, and humanity. Humanity which is empty and corrupted lost its will to perform a beneficial part in the progress and preservation of nature. The researcher employs a qualitative research methodology. The goal of qualitative research is to clarify the traits of the subjects it examines as they are understood by people. Thus, rather than aiming to collect and analyze factual facts, qualitative research instead explores subjective experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
20. El estado de conservación del paisaje de Galicia: veinte años después de la aprobación del Convenio Europeo del Paisaje.
- Author
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de Luaces, Alfonso and Schröder, Karsten
- Subjects
NATURE reserves ,GERMPLASM ,CULTURAL property ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,RURAL geography ,EUCALYPTUS - Abstract
Copyright of Recursos Rurais is the property of Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, Servicio de Publicaciones and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. THE WORLD OF WETIKO: AN INVESTIGATION.
- Author
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Vaughan, Rachael
- Subjects
ALGONQUINS (North American people) ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
This paper explores the Algonquin concept of wetiko, or windigo--a ruthless cannibal spirit--to explain the state of America today. Native American scholars such as Jack Forbes and Basil Johnston suggest wetikos really exist, and that their insatiable hunger and psychopathic lack of regard for others is at the root of globalization, neo-liberal economics, the destruction of the environment, and the widescale oppression of the world's people. This paper investigates the relationship between modernism and wetiko, and proposes an origin to the wetiko mindset, asking whether it is archetypal, and therefore potentially present in all of us, though more actualized in some. Finally it asks how indigenous societies have historically guarded against wetiko and how we can learn from them to resist wetikos now, since if we fail to confront them, they will eat us all alive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
22. When Girls Lead: Changing the Playbook for Climate Justice.
- Author
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Tsun-Chueh Huang and Bent, Emily
- Subjects
CLIMATE justice ,SOCIAL status ,SOCIAL movements ,CLIMATE change ,SOCIAL injustice - Abstract
Greta Thunberg's prominence in the climate justice movement symbolically positions girls at the epicenter of geopolitical resistance, but, while she is given immediate authority across media outlets, other girls' visions of a more equitable future are often disregarded; this demands our careful attention. We discuss the work of five New York City-based girl activists of color engaged in this movement. We explore the ways in which their intersectional identities and social positions shape their mobilization strategies and draw connections to other popular social justice movements; their activist playbook reveals the transformative potential of intersectional feminist politics in the hands of Generation Z. These girl activists of color generate sophisticated, relational platforms for climate justice informed by the interconnected issues of racial and economic injustice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Environmental Destruction and Armed Conflict: Protecting the Vulnerable Through Islamic Law.
- Author
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Devadasan, Shebanee
- Subjects
ISLAMIC law ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,NUCLEAR weapons ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,HANAFITES ,HANBALITES - Abstract
Environmental destruction, unfortunately, constitutes a common by-product of armed conflicts. Such destruction ravages the natural environment, and negatively impacts the livelihoods of vulnerable individuals that are disproportionately affected by such destruction. This article first examines how the Islamic law of armed conflict can be utilised to protect these vulnerable individuals. The article argues that a faith-based approach, which includes the role of religious leaders and faith-based organisations, provides an effective framework to help restore the natural environment and the livelihoods of those affected in an armed conflict. This is due to the emphasis placed by Islam and the Islamic law of armed conflict on protecting the environment, specifically by limiting the types of land that can be targeted and the types of weapons that can be used in armed conflicts. Examples from the conservation efforts in post-war Iraq are used to demonstrate the usefulness of a faith-based approach presented in this article. This article concludes that the Islamic law of armed conflict provides an essential source of protection for the vulnerable and the environment, and should be widely utilised in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
24. The Indonesian Government's Liability Against Forest Fires That Caused Losses to Malaysia
- Author
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Rizal Bagus Habibulloh and Rifqi Ridlo Phahlevy
- Subjects
forest fire ,environmental destruction ,cross-border smoke pollution ,Law - Abstract
This study aims to describe the form of Indonesia's accountability to countries that are directly affected by the haze caused by Indonesian forest fires according to the ASEAN Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution rules. This research is intended only for written legislation (law in books) and other legal materials. In normative research, the author will use doctrinal research methods that refer to legislation (statute approach) and a comparative approach (comparative approach). The results of this study indicate that Indonesia's accountability for cross-border smoke haze pollution due to forest fires is stipulated in Article 3 of the ASEAN Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution. Furthermore, the rights of countries affected by transboundary haze due to forest fires are regulated in Article 16 of the ASEAN Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution which states to increase preparedness and minimize risks to human health and the environment.
- Published
- 2021
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25. Water is dying everywhere.
- Author
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Hyde, Sandra Teresa
- Subjects
- *
CHRONOLOGY , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *SIPHONS - Abstract
Summary: This flash piece asks what development means for rivers, indigenous farmers, and tourists when we redirect, move, and siphon water from one region to another. The work considers rivers as traces of time, peoples, and environments, following my chronology and physical residence(s) in California, Hunan, Guangxi, and Yunnan in China. I begin in the Bay Area, where I grew up, and move to my time spent on five rivers in Southern China: the Xiangjiang, the Li, the Jinsha, the Lancang, and the Nujiang. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Send Lazarus: Catholicism and the Crises of Neoliberalism
- Author
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Eggemeier, Matthew T., author, Fritz, Peter Joseph, author, Eggemeier, Matthew T., and Fritz, Peter Joseph
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. When two elephants fight: insurgency, counter-insurgency and environmental sufferings in northeastern Nigeria.
- Author
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Olaniyan, Azeez O. and Okeke-Uzodike, Ufo
- Subjects
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COUNTERINSURGENCY , *INSURGENCY , *HABITAT destruction , *WATER pollution , *ARMED Forces - Abstract
The consequences of Boko Haram insurgency on the Nigerian state has enjoyed robust interrogation. However, most of the studies have concentrated on human and material losses to the neglect of the environment. Yet, the activities of the insurgents as well as the counterinsurgency strategies of the Nigerian armed forces, have negatively affected the environment. This study interrogates the impacts of the insurgency on the environment, using cases such as soil and water contamination, mining of landscapes, indiscriminate killings, and the destruction of habitats, farmlands and cultural landscapes as empirical evidence. The study concludes that activities of the militants and the military have had debilitating effects on the physical environment in northeastern Nigeria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Phantasmagoric Borneo.
- Author
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Kammen, Douglas
- Subjects
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RAIN forests , *OIL palm , *SCIENCE fiction , *COAL mining - Abstract
The island of Borneo has been the subject of starkly different portrayals. On the one hand, the devastation of the island's great rainforests, choking haze from fires set to clear land for oil palm plantations, and open-pit coal mining have prompted visions of environmental collapse. On the other hand, Indonesian President Joko Widodo's 2019 announcement that the national capital will be moved from Jakarta to East Kalimantan prompted utopian dreams that massive investment and technology will create a glorious future. This article explores how these competing portrayals of Borneo emerged historically through European and American fiction – including utopian novels, lost race stories, and pulp and science fiction – and are reflected and reproduced in Indonesian political thinking. The final section examines how these long-standing ideas about Borneo as the site of the fantastic and the phantasmagoric have colored media reporting and commentary about President Widodo's planned new capital in East Kalimantan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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29. Culture Wars Can Kill: Aggrieved masculinity is a public health problem
- Author
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Ashcraft, Karen Lee, author
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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30. De-theorizing in Order to Re-theorize Emergent Alignments: A Rumination
- Author
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Sassen, Saskia, Hviding, Edvard, Series editor, Bendixsen, Synnøve, Series editor, Burchardt, Marian, editor, and Kirn, Gal, editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. 'Life Was a State in Which a War Was On': A.S. Byatt’s Portrayal of War and Norse Mythology in Ragnarok: The End of the Gods
- Author
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Beyer, Charlotte, Buttsworth, Sara, editor, and Abbenhuis, Maartje, editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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32. The Role of Businesses
- Author
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Ortmann, Stephan and Ortmann, Stephan
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Japanese environmental sociology: Focus and issues in three stages of development.
- Author
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Hasegawa, Koichi
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL sociology , *SOCIAL structure , *FUKUSHIMA Nuclear Accident, Fukushima, Japan, 2011 , *SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
Japanese environmental sociology has developed many original perspectives, including the social structure of victims, the benefit versus victimized zone theory, and life environmentalism. Developments in the field can be divided into three stages. The first, to 2001, is characterized by the early organizing of environmental sociologists, including the establishment of the Japanese Association for Environmental Sociology (JAES), and its accompanying journal, and a focus on local environmental destruction case studies. The second, to 2011, is characterized by the institutionalization of the field, while the third was triggered by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami and the Fukushima nuclear disaster. The third stage is currently one of diversification and a crisis of academic identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Alienation and the task of geo-social critique.
- Author
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Choquet, Pierre-Louis
- Subjects
- *
CRITICAL theory , *CAPITALIST societies , *MODERN society , *SOCIAL alienation , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *TASKS , *ENVIRONMENTAL responsibility - Abstract
In this article, I argue that the concept of alienation should be mobilized to develop a ' geo-social ' critique of the generic forms of life that sustain contemporary capitalist societies, in a time when the stability of the Earth system is increasingly at risk. I contend that retrieving the full heuristic potential of the concept demands engaging the fields where it has been traditionally discussed (notably social philosophy and environmental philosophy) to demonstrate how their insights on alienation can be fruitfully combined. By putting greater emphasis on how society and nature are mutually embedded, this new approach to alienation highlights the anthropocentrism that critical theory has long conveyed and indicates how it could be at least partially corrected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. From ecocide to eco-sensitivity: 'greening' reparations at the International Criminal Court.
- Author
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Killean, Rachel
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL criminal courts , *CRIMINAL reparations , *ENVIRONMENTAL crimes , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *INTERNATIONAL criminal law - Abstract
This paper considers the possibilities and challenges facing international criminal law as a method of meaningfully responding to environmental destruction. Noting the interconnections between environmental destruction and the causes, conduct and impacts of mass violence, scholars have explored multiple ways in which international criminal law might be better equipped to respond to such harms. These have ranged from using existing provisions to introducing a new crime against the environment. This paper examines the evolution of these approaches and considers the capacity of international criminal law to respond to environmental destruction. In light of the challenges associated with introducing a new crime, it focuses on the possibilities associated with 'greening' the Rome Statute. Building on this approach, the paper considers whether the reparation framework adopted by the International Criminal Court offers an opportunity to meaningfully respond to environmental destruction and related human rights violations. It argues that there are three main ways in which this might be done: (i) by introducing the concept of 'eco-sensitivity' to reparations designed to respond to other anthropocentric harms; (ii) by awarding reparations that explicitly recognise the harm caused by environmental destruction when possible; and (iii) by exploring the possibilities of an environmental approach towards 'transformative reparations'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Application of Strict Liability Concept to Companies that Commit Crimes of Environmental Destruction.
- Author
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DIYANI, ARSHINTA FITRI, HIDAYAT, ARIEF, and SARASWATI, RETNO
- Subjects
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ENVIRONMENTAL crimes , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *STRICT liability , *LEGAL liability , *CRIMINAL intent , *CRIMINAL liability - Abstract
Mens rea, basically owned by humans, this becomes an obstacle to punishing corporations with sanctions that are appropriate considering that in Indonesian criminal law, there is a principle that colors the Criminal Code, namely geen straf zonder schuld (no criminal without wrongdoing). The purpose of this research is to analyze the application of strict liability concepts to companies that commit crimes of environmental destruction, constraints in the application of strict liability concepts to companies that commit crimes of environmental destruction. The research method used in this research is a qualitative research method with a normative approach. The secondary data collection consists of primary legal materials and secondary legal materials obtained through literature studies. Companies that commit crimes of environmental pollution are quite seen from the actions and impacts it produces (actus reus, criminal act), so the element of error (schuld) is not very considered for example concerning the accountability (mens rea, criminal responsibility) of the perpetrators, it will be complicated to determine the fault of the company because the company does not have the soul and will (mens rea) to do the deed. Constraints on the application of strict liability concept to companies that commit crimes of environmental destruction are due to the human resources factor of law enforcement and its legal application factor, namely in the fact that the application of this concept in Indonesia is not easy, among others, that so far no cases have been brought to court to demand strict liability. Therefore, a strict liability concept has never been applied in Indonesia because it has never been resolved through a court mechanism. Based on the above conclusions, it is necessary to accept the principle of Strict Liability by law enforcement, especially judges, to apply evidence of wrongdoing to the company and the need for efforts to formulate the principle of strict liability against corporations perpetrators of environmental crimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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37. Environmental Destruction
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Leal Filho, Walter, Series Editor, Azul, Anabela Marisa, editor, Brandli, Luciana, editor, Lange Salvia, Amanda, editor, and Wall, Tony, editor
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- 2021
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38. Modern City as the Source of Tragedy in Thomas Hardy’s Major Novels.
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Sharif, Azad Hamad
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RURAL sociology ,PEASANTS ,FORCED migration ,SOCIAL problems ,AGRICULTURAL laborers - Abstract
Copyright of Alustath is the property of Republic of Iraq Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research (MOHESR) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
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39. Animal Studies: Let's Talk About Animal Welfare and Liberation Issues in Childhood.
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Ankomah, William Sarfo
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL rights , *ANIMAL welfare , *FOSTER children - Abstract
This article examined reasons why information pertaining to nonhuman animal welfare and liberation should be introduced during childhood. Studies indicate that animal-welfare activists' and abolitionists' efforts to date may be insufficient given the pervasive environmental destruction and ongoing animal suffering. Moreover, research reveals that education related to animal welfare and liberation is systematically excluded from children's education, and they thus remain unaware of the sources and associated health hazards of meat they consume. Conversely, children's knowledge about animal welfare increases when exposed to literature on the topic, which enables them to make informed choices regarding meat consumption. This paper draws on animal-welfare and liberation literature to argue that augmenting children's knowledge about animal welfare and liberation can foster children's understanding, language, philosophy, and ability to make informed choices about their relationship with animals and the environment in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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40. Gender, Geothermal Energy, and Environment: The Impact of Baturraden Geothermal Power Plant Exploration on Women and Environment in Banyumas, Indonesia
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Kusuma, Ayusia, Bintarsari, Nuriyeni, Diryat, Nurlaela, Kusuma, Ayusia, Bintarsari, Nuriyeni, and Diryat, Nurlaela
- Abstract
Geothermal energy is considered as renewable energy and environmentally friendly. However, during the exploration process, a Geothermal Power Plant (PLTP) commonly leaves various environmental problems, such as destroyed conservation areas, floods, landslides, and reduced clean water sources. The impact of the Baturraden Geothermal Power Plant exploration also has resulted in water pollution of the Mengaji and Prukut rivers, which eventually could no longer be used as clean water sources for people’s daily lives, especially women. This PLTP Baturraden case study aimed to observe the relationship between environment, gender, and geothermal energy, especially the impact of geothermal power plant exploration. This research used a qualitative method by collecting primary data through interviews and secondary data through literature studies. This study showed that PLTP Baturraden exploration had negative impacts in 2017-2018 water pollution of Prukut River as a clean water source and directly affected women in Panembangan, Cilongok. Using a gender analysis, environmental destruction is analyzed through three things, namely formal and informal constraints, division of labor, and access to resources which have a worsening impact on women.
- Published
- 2023
41. Traditional Ecological Awareness and Causes of Environmental Destruction in Tibetan Pastoralists Districts of Qinghai province from the Perspective of Local Residents -Focusing on the Current State of Ecological Immigration Policy-
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伝統的な生態学的知識 ,生態移民 ,Ecological Immigrants ,Pastoralists ,Environmental Destruction ,環境破壊 ,牧畜民 ,コモンズ ,Commons ,Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) - Abstract
環境保護と貧困脱却をきっかけとする中国チベット地区の生態移民政策が実施されてから、すでに15年以上経過している。政策の実施により、重点保護区域の住民をはじめ、厳しい自然環境の中で暮らしてきた一部の牧畜民は現代化した利便性の高い生活環境を提供され、移民村で安定かつ安心した生活を送っている。しかし、重点保護区域以外の地域では、生態移民政策の実施に伴い、家畜の急減や近代化の波による人口流出が進行してしまった。 そもそも環境保護は近代の科学的な活動に限られたものではなく、科学的な環境保護の活動歴が短いチベット地区においては、伝統的な環境保護策や慣習法、長年にわたる牧畜生活の経験知でいわゆる環境保護の機能を果たしてきた。そのために、環境保護を考察する上で、伝統的な生態意識の部分の重要性がもっと注目されてもよいと考える。 本論文では、自然環境の改善状況、環境破壊の原因、伝統的な生態意識、環境保護と生活向上との関連性などの住民の意識を多角的な実証的データに基づいて明らかにし、生態移民政策を評価することが目的である。 分析対象は、青海省チベット地区における4州1市18カ所の生態移民村の500人である。分析の結果、年齢層が高くなるにつれて牧畜地の自然環境が改善しなかったとする傾向が見られた。牧草地の環境破壊の原因について、住民と政府の間で認識のギャップが生じており、住民の伝統的な生態意識が普遍的に高い中、新たな変容が生じていることを明確化することができた。最後に、伝統的な生態意識の伝承、並びにコモンズの再生に向けて、「牧畜民が草原と町の間を行き来する生活を送ることで環境保護と生活向上が同時に達成できる」という二地域居住の暮らし方を尊重しつつ、新時代に適した牧畜業の模索が必要だと提起することができた。, In this paper, reviewing previous studies and theories related to environmental protection of ecological immigrations, I will discuss the destruction and restoration of the natural environment from various perspectives such as traditional ecological awareness, current occupation, education background and place of residence. The aim is to clarify the effects and issues of ecological immigration policy. The analysis target is the questionnaire survey conducted in 2019, 500 immigrants from 18 ecological immigrant villages in 4 states and 1 city in Qinghai Province. As a result of the analysis, first, 60% of the herders recognize that the natural environment of the pastoral land has improved, while more than 10% recognize that it is getting worse, and as the age group gets older. Second, there is a perception gap between residents and the government about the causes of environmental destruction in pastures. Then, it was clarified that a new transformation is occurring while the traditional ecological awareness of the inhabitants is universally high. Finally, for the transmission of traditional ecological awareness and the revitalization of the commons, with respect for the lifestyle of dual residence. I was able to propose that it is necessary to search for a livestock farming industry suitable for the new era., 論文
- Published
- 2022
42. Ecofeminist Perspectives on Sustainability
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Jaiswal, Astha
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- 2017
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43. SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC INDICATORS OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF IVORY COAST
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S A Kamagate and M G Makarova
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ivory coast ,sustainable development ,poverty levels ,life expectancy ,population growth ,environmental destruction ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Ivory Coast, the Gulf of Guinea country, faces numerous social and economic problems on the road to its development. These problems make the country one of the poorest countries in the world, and lead to an increase in load on the environment. National Sustainable Development Strategy of the country consists of seven sections, focusing on institutional indicators. Commission on Sustainable Development recommends using economic, social and environmental indicators. Therefore, in this article, on the basis of ecological and economic analysis of the country, we offer a system of indicators covering all groups of indicators.
- Published
- 2016
44. Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis Due to Living Environmental Pollution Caused by Masked Musangs.
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Hashimoto E and Satoh H
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Hypersensitivity pneumonitis is an allergic disease caused by various factors such as animal proteins and chemicals. The masked musang, a small animal of the Viverridae family native to East Asia, tends to infiltrate spaces like the attics of residences, causing damage through the deposition of excrement and other means. The older Japanese patient had been experiencing cough, shortness of breath, and fever for two months before presenting to our hospital. The symptoms improved upon admission to a local medical facility but deteriorated upon discharge. This cycle was repeated twice before the patient was admitted to our hospital. Based on the recurrent pattern of improvement during hospitalization and exacerbation upon returning home, along with the results of CT imaging and bronchoscopy, we suspected hypersensitivity pneumonitis. An environmental investigation at the patient's residence revealed a masked musang nest in the attic above the patient's room. After cleaning the attic, the symptoms did not recur. Consequently, we diagnosed hypersensitivity pneumonitis due to living environmental pollution caused by masked musangs. To the best of our knowledge, there have been no previous case reports of hypersensitivity pneumonitis caused by masked musangs. When wild animals invade human living environments, there is a possibility that not only infectious diseases but also immunological disorders, including allergic diseases, may appear., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright © 2024, Hashimoto et al.)
- Published
- 2024
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45. Displaced Persons’ Temporary Settlement Along the Thai–Myanmar Border: State of Affairs from an Environmental Perspective
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Thadaniti, Suwattana, U-Sha, Kanokphan, Lambregts, Bart, Bhiromkaew, Jaturapat, Wijitkosum, Saowanee, Prombang, Vollop, Toommakorn, Suchaow, AFES-PRESS, Dr. Dr. D. AFES-PRESS AFES-PRESS, Series editor, Thadaniti, Suwattana, editor, and Chantavanich, Supang, editor
- Published
- 2014
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46. KURTZ AS MAMMON: AN ARCHETYPAL ANALYSIS OF JOSEPH CONRAD'S HEART OF DARKNESS.
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Singh, V. Bala and Mishra, Sanjit
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LITERARY criticism ,ECOCRITICISM ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation in literature - Abstract
Though the archetypal analysis of a given text was a popular tool available with the scholars during the decades annmd 1930s and 1940s, its utility as a scholastic method could be rediscovered even. to this day as we have a plethora of other critical theories. The present study intends to examine Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness in the light of this observation with a view tojuxtaposing eco-chticism, environmental studies and mythical methods-all in one In the paper, the Biblical character of Mammon, appropriated via Milton, offers a critical space for inquiring into the projection of Conrad's Kurtz with the possibilities for a discourse on environmental destruction. The recurrence of themes and concurrent metaphorical similarities of the characters Kurtz in Heart of Darkness and Mammon, a character in the Bibleasone among the fallen angels shares the similar archetypal patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
47. Intertwined Ecologies.
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Jurriëns, Edwin
- Subjects
- *
AESTHETICS , *NATURE , *PAINTING , *SCULPTURE , *MURAL art , *PHOTOGRAPHS , *MULTIMEDIA artists - Abstract
This article examines engagements with the natural environment in Indonesian contemporary art, with a specific focus on Yogyakarta-based multimedia artist Setu Legi. After discussing various historical models of Indonesian creative engagements with the environment, I argue that Legi's work deals with environmental problems by personalising the political as well as highlighting political aspects of the personal. Using the work of Félix Guattari and T J Demos, I show how his art offers a form of eco-aesthetics that disentangles the interconnections between art, politics and the natural environment. I analyse Legi's critical exploration of the concept of 'homeland' (tanah air) and the geopolitics of West Papua through his creation of alternative maps of the Indonesian archipelagic state. Finally, I demonstrate how Legi relates cultural and environmental destruction as well as possible solutions for these problems to a range of religious and spiritual ideas and practices in Indonesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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48. Unequal Security
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Beeson, Mark, author
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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49. Green Criminology: Capitalism, Green Crime and Justice, and Environmental Destruction
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Michael A. Long and Michael J. Lynch
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Environmental destruction ,Political science ,Capitalism ,Criminology ,Law ,Economic Justice ,Green criminology - Abstract
Green criminology has developed into a criminological subfield with a substantial literature. That literature is so vast that a single review cannot do it justice. This article examines the definition of green crime, the historical development of green criminology, some major areas of green criminological research, and potential future developments. Unlike traditional criminology with its focus on human victims, green criminology recognizes that various living entities can be victims of the ways in which humans harm ecosystems. Green research thus explores crime, victimization, and justice from several theoretical positions that acknowledge these unique victims. Although green criminology contains several approaches, this review primarily focuses on political economic green criminology. The section titled The Definition, Overview, and Historical Development of Green Criminology identifies, but does not review in depth, other forms of green criminology.
- Published
- 2022
50. Negotiating Native Canadian Identity on the Brink of Environmental Destruction: Exploring Thomas King's 'Green Grass Running Water' (1993) and 'The Back of the Turtle' (2014)
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Ταυτότητες ,Αυτόχθονες Πληθυσμοί του Καναδά ,Native Canadian Populations ,Identities ,Environmental Destruction ,Περιβαλλοντική Καταστροφή - Abstract
This thesis contributes to the flourishing interest – within Canadian studies, and N. American Studies more broadly – in Native land and environmental rights represented in literary works, as well as in the impact of environmental destruction on processes of Native Canadian identity negotiation. This thesis constitutes a comparative analysis of the novels Green Grass, Running Water (1993) and The Back of the Turtle (2014), written by Native Canadian author Thomas King. Focus is placed on explorations of what Rob Nixon has defined as “slow violence” and the complex interrelations that can be located in contemporary Native Canadian literature between identity, epistemic violence, environmental destruction and active struggle against capitalist appropriations of Native land. Nixon’s approach is employed in this research project in order to examine King’s critique against the capitalist appropriation of Native land which represents a form of slow violence. The thesis also examines forms of collective identification that are driven by proactive cultural reclamation, and appear favorable towards modifications of membership rules, and thus are open to potential redefinitions of Native belonging. This study explores how Thomas King’s two novels underline the dynamics of literature to discuss and to alert the reader to the potential further destruction of Indigenous spaces, and the subsequent impeachment of these peoples’ rights. Finally, this research project argues that King prioritizes in these two novels different forms of resistance against forms of slow and epistemic violence. More specifically, in Green Grass, Running Water, King highlights the significance of storytelling practices which draw on the mythical figures of the Trickster and the ‘Woman who Fell from the Sky’ as a source of inspiration for drastic change. On the other hand, the thesis demonstrates that in The Back of the Turtle King prioritizes the importance of human agency and responsibility against neo-imperial schemes which aim to appropriate Native land., Η παρούσα διατριβή εστιάζει στη σύγχρονη Καναδική λογοτεχνία, την οποία προσεγγίζει στο πλαίσιο των Βορειοαμερικανικών σπουδών. Πιο συγκεκριμένα μελετώνται θέματα ταυτότητας αυτόχθονων πληθυσμών του Καναδά σε συνάρτηση με τα περιβαλλοντικά τους δικαιώματα όπως αυτά παρουσιάζονται στα λογοτεχνικά έργα, Green Grass, Running Water (1993) και The Back of the Turtle (2014). Η διατριβή αποτελεί μία συγκριτική ανάλυση των μυθιστορημάτων Green Grass, Running Water (1993) και The Back of the Turtle (2014), του αυτόχθονα Καναδού συγγραφέα Thomas King και εστιάζει στον αντίκτυπο που έχει η περιβαλλοντική καταστροφή στη διαδικασία διαπραγμάτευσης της ταυτότητας των αυτόχθονων Καναδικών πληθυσμών. Επικεντρώνεται στην εξερεύνηση της έννοιας της «αργής βίας» όπως έχει οριστεί από τον Rob Nixon και στις σύνθετες σχέσεις που εντοπίζονται στη σύγχρονη λογοτεχνία των αυτόχθονων Καναδών μεταξύ της ταυτότητας, της επιστημικής βίας, της περιβαλλοντικής καταστροφής καθώς και του ενεργού αγώνα ενάντια στην καπιταλιστική οικειοποίηση της γης των αυτόχθονων πληθυσμών του Καναδά. Η ερευνητική αυτή εργασία χρησιμοποιεί την προσέγγιση του Nixon με σκοπό να εξετάσει την κριτική του King κατά της καπιταλιστικής οικειοποίησης της γης των αυτόχθονων, η οποία οικειοποίηση αποτελεί μία μορφή αργής βίας. Η διατριβή διερευνά επίσης μορφές συλλογικής αναγνώρισης που τροφοδοτούνται από μία στάση ενεργούς διεκδίκησης των πολιτισμικών δικαιωμάτων των πληθυσμών αυτών. Οι μορφές αυτές φαίνονται θετικές όσον αφορά την τροποποίηση των κανόνων ένταξης στις αυτόχθονες Καναδικές κοινότητες. Διερευνώνται οι τρόποι με τους οποίους τα δύο μυθιστορήματα του Thomas King υπογραμμίζουν τη δυνατότητα της λογοτεχνίας να προειδοποιήσει τον αναγνώστη/ την αναγνώστρια όσον αφορά την πιθανή περαιτέρω καταστροφή της γης των αυτόχθονων αυτών πληθυσμών. Τέλος, η διατριβή υποστηρίζει ότι στα δυο μυθιστορήματα ο King δίνει έμφαση σε διαφορετικές μεθόδους αντίστασης ενάντια στις εκφάνσεις αργής και επιστημικής βίας. Ειδικότερα στο μυθιστόρημα Green Grass, Running Water, ο King τονίζει τη σημασία των προφορικών αφηγηματικών πρακτικών οι οποίες είναι εμπνευσμένες από τις μυθικές φιγούρες του Trickster και της «Γυναίκας που έπεσε από τον Ουρανό», στοχεύοντας σε μία δραστική κοινωνικοπολιτική αλλαγή. Αντίθετα, στο μυθιστόρημα The Back of the Turtle η διατριβή υποδεικνύει ότι ο King δίνει μεγαλύτερη προτεραιότητα στη σημασία της ανθρώπινης συλλογικής δράσης και υπευθυνότητας ως μέσων εναντίωσης στα νέο-ιμπεριαλιστικά σχέδια τα οποία αποσκοπούν στην οικειοποίηση της γης των αυτόχθονων πληθυσμών.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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