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Auteur
Ruchira Talukdar has worked in environment movement in India and Australia, in Greenpeace, Australian Conservation Foundation and Friends of the Earth, for two decades. Her research and writing focusses on comparative aspects of climate justice between the global North and South, with specific reference to Australia and South Asia. Her PhD thesis compared the politics and resistance to coal in Australia and India. Ruchira co-founded Sapna South Asian Climate Solidarity, a climate justice project based out of Australia, for effective global North solidarity for just climate futures in the global South. She is based out of Melbourne and Calcutta.
Texte du rabat
Based on ethnographic and historic research in Australia and India, this book compares the politics and resistance to coal in the two countries, particularly focusing on the time period between 2009 and 2018, and the case of the Carmichael coalmine in Queensland and the Mahan coalmine in central India.
Contenu
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction A comparative ethnography of anti-coal activism in Australia and India
Research case studies and questions
Research approach, methods, materials and structure
Book chapters and literatures
Chapter 2: Environmentalism of the global North and South: historic divisions and potential for common ground
A critique of wilderness-centric Northern environmentalism
Australian environmentalism
Indian environmentalism
Environmentalism's divisions and common ground in the climate era
Chapter 3: Environmentalism of the poor in neoliberal India
Constitutional democracy
How the postcolonial State shaped Indian environmentalism
How the neoliberal State shapes environmentalism of the poor
Environmentalism of the poor in neoliberal India
Analysis: Environmentalism's journey from democratising development to dissent as democracy
Chapter 4: Countering coal in India: politics of the Mahan coal mine
Background: Greenpeace's activism in India
Political economy of coal in India
Politics and resistance of the Mahan coalmine (2010-2014)
State crackdown and fight back by Greenpeace (2014-2016)
Analysis: Countering coal through asserting democratic rights
Chapter 5: An anti-coal movement in India's energy capital
Background: discontent and displacement in Singrauli
Use and abuse of the Forest Rights Act
Formation of the Mahan Sangharsh Samiti
State-corporate nexus in Mahan
An unusual alliance and its resistance
A celebration of people's forest rights
Analysis: Significance of forest rights in India's energy capital
Chapter 6: Environmentalism in the era of Australia's minerals boom
Contradictions and unevenness of the Australian State
Minerals boom and contradictions of the Australian State
Narratives, politics and alliances of environmentalism
during the resource boom
Analysis: Environmentalism's transformation to End(ing) Coal!
Chapter 7: Countering coal in Australia: the politics of the Carmichael coalmine
Political economy of coal in Australia
Environmental politics of the Carmichael coalmine (2012-2018)
Land rights politics of the Carmichael coalmine (2010-2018)
Analysis: Countering coalmining through various scales of contestations
Chapter 8: Resistances from coal's new frontier in the Galilee Basin in Central Queensland
Background: Settler colonialism in the in the Galilee Basin
Tactics of anti-coal environmentalism
Rural discontent over coal and Farmers for Climate Action
'We meet at the crossroad': Wangan and Jagalingou's alliances
Analysis: The significance of countering Adani from Central Queensland
Chapter 9: A global outlook for anti-coal climate justice activism
Varieties of climate justice
Green relations with Indigenous and farmers' groups
Indigenous land rights and resistances compared
Coal politics and environmental campaigns in Australia and India
Discussion: Possibilities and challenges in building a North-South intersectional outlook for environmentalism
Contributions to Political Ecology and Environmental Justice Research
Conclusion
Index