Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1225594
Anthropocene
Anthropocene // Handbook of Critical Environmental Politics / Pellizzoni, Luigi ; Leonardi, Emanuele ; Asara, Viviana (ur.).
Cheltenham : Northampton (MA): Edward Elgar Publishing, 2022. str. 91-103
CROSBI ID: 1225594 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Anthropocene
Autori
Brajdić Vuković, Marija ; Domazet, Mladen
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Poglavlja u knjigama, znanstveni
Knjiga
Handbook of Critical Environmental Politics
Urednik/ci
Pellizzoni, Luigi ; Leonardi, Emanuele ; Asara, Viviana
Izdavač
Edward Elgar Publishing
Grad
Cheltenham : Northampton (MA)
Godina
2022
Raspon stranica
91-103
ISBN
978-1-83910-066-6
Ključne riječi
Anthropocene, Enlightenment ideals, Capitalism, justice, energy transformations
Sažetak
This chapter deals with the concept of Anthropocene, a techno-scientific label proposed by specialists in earth system sciences, as a technical name for a geological epoch marked by a significant impact of purposeful human activity on Earth’s geology and ecosystems. In environmental politics it is also a conceptual framework within which to observe the constraints and potentials of contemporary natures and societies through the interrelationship between ecology and justice. The simplistic reading of the Anthropocene is one in which humanity’s propensity for broadly understood development (as an instrument of emancipation), resulted in a systemic destabilizing of non-human nature. This, in turn, is now undercutting the attainments of that development and threatening to bring down the whole process. Yet with a multitude of subsistence, control, learning, conflict, contraction and expansion activities taking place in the everyday interactions between over 7 billion humans themselves (with varying consequences for the biosphere: human and non- human life) a new way of presenting some of that interaction is needed in order to fight to extinguish the destructive and unjust interactions while amplifying those that are regenerative and emancipative. The hegemonic conception of development is unable to articulate a globally just and sustainable universal format of these interactions, differentiating between the political and economic obstinacy to deviate from a destructive path and the existing instances of climate-restorative livelihoods.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Sociologija
POVEZANOST RADA
Ustanove:
Institut za društvena istraživanja , Zagreb