Footprints Accessed March 19, 2014. corexit-devil-bp-and-epa-administrator-lisa-jacksons-legacy/.

advertisement
“A Bargain With the Corexit Devil: BP and EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson’s Legacy.” Footprints.
Accessed March 19, 2014. http://www.gcbarefootdocs.org/blog/2013/05/06/a-bargain-with-thecorexit-devil-bp-and-epa-administrator-lisa-jacksons-legacy/.
Ackerman, Frank. “If We Had a Theory of Political Ecology, What Would It Look Like?” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 11 (2000): 77–82.
Adam, Barbara. “Industrial Food For Thought.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Afiff, Suraya, and Celia Lowe. “Claiming Indigenous Community: Political Discourse and Natural
Resource Rights in Indonesia.” Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 32 (2007): 73–97.
Agamben, Giorgio. Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life. Stanford, CA: Stanford University
Press, 1998.
———. The Open: Man and Animal. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2004.
Ahteensuu, Marko, and Helena Siipi. “A Critical Assessment of Public Consultations on GMOs in the
European Union.” Environmental Values 18 (2009): 129–52.
———. “A Critical Assessment of Public Consultations on GMOs in the European Union.”
Environmental Values 18 (2009): 129–52.
Aikau, Hokulani K., and James H. Spencer. “Introduction: Local Reaction to Global Integration–The
Political Economy of Development in Indigenous Communities.” Alternatives: Global, Local,
Political 23 (2007): 1–8.
Aiken, William. “Human Rights in an Ecological Era.” Environmnetal Values 1 (1992).
Aikin, Scott F. “Democratic Deliberation, Public Reason, and Environmental Politics.” Environmental
Philosophy 3 (2006).
Akerman, Maria. “What Does ’Natural Capital’ Do? The Role of Metaphor in Economic
Understanding of the Environment.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Aldred, Jonathan. “Cost-Benefit Analysis, Incommensurability, and Rough Equality.” Environmental
Values 11 (2002).
Alier, Joan Martinez. “Retrospective Environmentalism and Environmental Justice Movements
Today.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000): 45–50.
Allen, Patricia. “Sustainable Agriculture at the Crossroads.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 2 (1991):
20–28.
Alter, Joan Martinez. “International Biopiracy versus the Value of Local Knowlege.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 11 (2000): 59–66.
———. “Problems of Ecological Degradation: Environmental Justice or Ecological Modernization?”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 133–38.
Altvater, Elmar. “Ecological and Economic Modalities of Time and Space.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 1 (1990): 59–70.
Alward, Peter. “The Naive Argument Against Mora Vegetarianism.” Environmental Values 9 (2000).
Andersen, Regine. “The Time Dimension in International Regime Interplay.” Global Environmental
Politics 2 (2002): 98–117.
Anderson, Paul Nicholas. “The GE Debate: What Is at Risk When Risk Is Defined for Us?”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 39–44.
Anderson, Terry L., and Donald R. Leal. Free Market Environmentalism. Revised. London: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2001.
Andree, Peter. “The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety and Shifts in the Discourse of Precaution.”
Global Environmental Politics 5 (2005): 25–46.
Apert, Peter. “The Boulder and the Sphere: Subjectivity and Implicit Values in Biology.”
Environmental Values 4 (1995).
Arias-Maldonado, Manuel. “An Imaginary Solution? The Green Defence of Deliberative
Democracy.” Environmental Values 16 (2007): 233–52.
———. “The Democratisation of Sustainability: The Search for a Green Democratic Model.”
Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Armitage, Kevin C. “The Continuity of Nature and Experience: John Dewey’s Pragmatic
Environmentalism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 49–72.
Arnold, Richard, and Andrew B. Whitford. “Making Environmental Self-Regulation Mandatory.”
Global Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 1–12.
Athanasiou, Tom. “The Age of Greenwashing.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 1–36.
Atkinson, Adrian. “Taking Sides: Anthropology, Environmentalism, and the Academy.”
Environmental Politics 6 (1997).
Attfield, Robin. “Postmodernism, Value, and Objectivity.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
———. “Saving Nature, Feeding People, and Ethics.” Environmental Values 7 (1998).
———. “Silvan, Fox, and Deep Ecology.” Environmental Values 2 (1993).
Avery, Stephen. “The Misbegotten Child of Deep Ecology.” Environmental Values 13 (2004): 31–50.
Baber, Walter F., and Robert V. Bartlett. Deliberative Environmental Politics: Democracy and
Ecological Rationality. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2005.
Bachram, Heidi. “Climate Fraud and Carbon Colonialism: The New Trade in Greenhouse Gases.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 15 (2004): 5–20.
Backstrand, Karin. “Civic Science for Sustainability: Reframing the Role of Experts, Policy-Makers,
and Citizens in Environmental Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 3 (2004): 24–41.
———. “Science, Uncertainty, and Participation in Global Environmental Governance.”
Environmental Politics 13 (2004): 650–56.
———. “Scientisation vs. Civic Expertise in Environmental Governance: Eco-Feminist, Eco-Modern,
and Post-Modern Responses.” Environmental Politics 13 (2004): 695–714.
Backstrand, Karin, and Eva Lovbrand. “Planting Trees to Mitigate Climate Change: Contested
Discourses of Ecological Modernisation, Green Governmentality, and Civic Environmentalism.”
Global Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 50–75.
Baker, Susan. “The Dynamics of European Union Biodiversity Policy: Interactive, Functional, and
Institutional Logics.” Environmental Politics 12 (2003).
Ball, Terence. “New Ethics for Old? Or How (Not) to Think About Future Generations.”
Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Balsiger, Jorg. “Science and International Environmental Policy: Regimes and Nonregimes in Global
Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 7 (2007): 155–57.
Bannon, Bryan E. “Animals, Language, and Life: Searching for Animal Attunement with Heidegger
and Merleau-Ponty.” Environmental Philosophy 6 (2009).
Barfield, Owen. “Saving the Appearances: A Study in Idolatry,” 1957.
Bari, Judi. “Revolutionary Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 145–49.
Barkdull, John, and Paul G. Harris. “Environmental Change and Foreign Policy: A Survey of
Theory.” Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 63–91.
Barker, Michael. “The Liberal Foundations of Environmentalism: Revisiting the Rockefeller-Ford
Connection.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 19 (2008): 15–42.
Barkin, J. Samuel. “Discounting the Discount Rate: Ecocentrism and Environmental Economics.”
Global Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 56–72.
———. “The Political Economy of the Car.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 149–53.
———. “Trade, Sustainable Development, and the Environment.” Global Environmental Politics 3
(2003): 92–97.
Barkin, Samuel. “The Counterintuitive Relationship Between Globalization and Climate Change.”
Global Environmental Politics 3 (2003): 8–13.
Barry, John. “Deep Ecology, Socialism and Human ‘being in the World:’; A Part Of, yet apart from
Nature.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 30–38.
———. Rethinking Green Politics: Nature, Virtue, and Progress. London; Thousand Oaks, CA:
SAGE, 1999.
———. “The Emergence of Ecofeminist Political Economy.” Environmental Politics 7 (1998).
———. The Politics of Actually Existing Unsustainability: Human Flourishing in a ClimateChanged, Carbon Constrained World. Oxford University Press, 2012.
Barry, Brian Baxter, John, and Richard Dunphy. Europe, Globalization and Sustainable Development.
London; New York: Routledge, 2004.
Barry, John, and Robyn Eckersley. The State and the Global Ecological Crisis. Edited by John Barry
and Robyn Eckersley. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2005.
Barry, John, and E. Gene Frankland. International Encyclopedia of Environmental Politics. 1st ed.
London: Routledge, 2001.
Barry, John, Geraint Ellis, and Clive Robinson. “Cool Rationalities and Hot Air: A Rhetorical
Approach to Understanding Debates on Renewable Energy.” Global Environmental Politics 8
(2008): 67–98.
Barry, John, and John L. R. Proops. Citizenship, Sustainability and Environmental Research: Q
Methodology and Local Exchange Trading Systems. Cheltenham, UK; Northampton, MA:
Edward Elgar, 2000.
Barry, John, and Marcel Wissenburg. Sustaining Liberal Democracy: Ecological Challenges and
Opportunities. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2001.
Baumol, William J., and Wallace E. Oates. The Theory of Environmental Policy. 2nd ed. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1988.
Baxter, Brian. A Theory of Ecological Justice. 1st ed. London: Routledge, 2004.
Baxter, Brian H. “Ecocentrism and Persons.” Environmental Values 5 (1996).
———. “Ecological Justice and Justice as Impartiality.” Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
———. “Environmental Ethics–Values or Obligations? A Reply to O’Neill.” Environmental Values 8
(1999).
Beckman, Ludvig. “Do Global Climate Change and the Interest of Future Generations Have
Implications for Democracy?” Environmental Politics 17 (August 2008): 610–24.
Beckman, Ludvig, and Edward A. Page. “Perspectives on Justice, Democracy, and Global Climate
Change.” Environmental Politics 17 (August 2008): 527–35.
Beder, Sharon. “Neoliberal Think Tanks and Free Market Environmentalism.” Environmental Politics
10 (2001).
Bellany, Ian. The Environment in World Politics: Exploring the Limits. Cheltenham, UK; Brookfield,
VT: Edward Elgar, 1997.
Bell, Derek R. “Liberal Environmental Citizenship.” Environmental Politics 14 (2005): 179–94.
Benatar, David. “Why the Naive Argument Against Moral Vegetarianism Really Is Naive.”
Environmental Values 10 (2001).
Bennett, Jane. The Enchantment of Modern Life: Attachments, Crossings, and Ethics. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 2001.
———. “The Force of Things: Steps toward an Ecology of Matter.” Political Theory 32 (2004):
347–72.
———. Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things. Duke University Press, 2009.
Benton, Ted. “Environmental Values and Human Purposes.” Environmental Values 17 (2008):
201–20.
———. The Greening of Marxism. New York: The Guilford Press, 1996.
Berglund, Christer, and Simon Matti. “Citizen and Consumer: The Dual Role of Individuals in
Environmental Policy.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 550–71.
Bernstein, Steven. “Liberal Environmentalism and Global Environmental Governance.” Global
Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 1–16.
Berry, Wendell. A Continous Harmony: Essays Cultural and Agricultural. New York: Harcourt Brace,
1972.
———. A Continous Harmony: Essays Cultural and Agricultural. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1972.
———. Another Turn of the Crank. Cambridge: Counterpoint, 1996.
———. Citizenship Papers. Washington, DC: Shoemaker and Hoard, 2004.
———. Home Economics. New York: North Point Press, 1987.
———. In the Presence of Fear: Three Essays for a Changed World. Great Barrington, MA: The
Orion Society, 2001.
———. The Gift of Good Land. New York: North Point Press, 1982.
———. The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books,
1996.
———. What Are People For?. New York: North Point Press, 1990.
Betsill, Michele. “Green Cities: Urban Growth and the Environment.” Global Environmental Politics
8 (2008): 147–48.
Biehl, Janet. The Murray Bookchin Reader. London; Washington: Cassell, 1997.
Biermann, Frank, and Klaus Dingwerth. “Global Environmental Change and the Nation State.”
Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 1–22.
Biro, Andrew. Critical Ecologies: The Frankfurt School and Contemporary Environmental Crises.
University of Toronto Press, 2011.
———. Denaturalizing Ecological Politics: Alienation from Nature, from Rousseau to the Frankfurt
School and Beyond. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2005.
Blair, David J. “Trade Liberalisation, Environmental Regulation, Adn the Limits of Reformism: The
North American Experience.” Environmental Politics 17 (November 2008): 693–711.
Blanke, Henry T. “Domination and Utopia: Marcuse’s Discourse on Nature, Psyche and Culture.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 99–123.
Blasco, Jaume. “The Completely Normal Uncertainty: Biotechnology Discussion with Roger Strand.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 13 (2002): 137–49.
Bluhdorn, Ingolfur. “A Theory of Post-Ecologist Politics.” Environmental Politics 6 (1997).
———. “Economics as If Community Matters: Narratives About Globalization.” Environmental
Politics 12 (2003).
———. “Governance from Below: Attempts to Postpone the Day of Reckoning.” Environmental
Politics 12 (2003): 133–37.
———. “Local Capacity Building and Global Governance.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. Post-Ecologist Politics: Social Theory and the Abdication of the Ecologist Paradigm. 1st ed.
London: Routledge, 2001.
Blühdorn, Ingolfur. Post-Ecologist Politics: Social Theory and the Abdication of the Ecologist
Paradigm. Routledge, 2012.
Bluhdorn, Ingolfur. “Sustaining the Unsustainable: Symbolic Politics and the Politics of Stimulation.”
Environmental Politics 16 (2007): 251–75.
Bluhdorn, Ingolfur, and Ian Welsh. “Eco-Politics Beyond the Paradigm of Sustainability: A
Conceptual Framework and Research Agenda.” Environmental Politics 16 (April 2007):
185–205.
Boardman, Robert. The Political Economy of Nature: Environmental Debates and the Social Sciences.
London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2001.
Boehmer-Christiansen, Sonja. “Investing Against Climate Change: Why Failure Remains Possible.”
Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
Boersema, Jan J. “How to Prepare for the Unknown? On the Significance of Future Generations and
Future Studies in Environmental Policy.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
Boland, Josephe. “Ecological Modernization.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 135–41.
Bonnano, Alessandro. “The Ideological Dimension of Biotechnological Research: An Exploratory
Analysis.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 3 (1992): 125–32.
Bookchin, Murray. Deep Ecology & Anarchism: A Polemic. London: Freedom Press, 1992.
———. Ecology and Revolutionary Thought. New York, NY: Times Change Press, 1970.
———. From Urbanization to Cities: Toward a New Politics of Citizenship. London; New York:
Cassell, 1995.
———. Municipalization: Community Ownership of the Economy. Green Program Project, 1986.
———. Our Synthetic Environment. New York: Knopf, 1962.
———. Re-Enchanting Humanity: A Defense of the Human Spirit Against Antihumanism,
Misanthropy, Mysticism, and Primitivism. London  ; New York: Cassell, 1995.
———. Remaking Society: Pathways to a Green Future. Boston, MA: South End Press, 1990.
———. The Ecology of Freedom: The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy. Oakland, CA: AK
Press, 2005.
———. The Modern Crisis. Philadelphia, PA: New Society Publishers, 1986.
———. The Modern Crisis. Philadelphia, PA: New Society Publishers, 1986.
———. The Philosophy of Social Ecology: Essays on Dialectical Naturalism. 2nd ed. Toronto,
Canada: Black Rose Books, 1994.
———. The Rise of Urbanization and the Decline of Citizenship. 1st ed. San Francisco: Sierra Club
Books, 1987.
———. The Third Revolution: Popular Movements in the Revolutionary Era, Vol 1. New York:
Cassell, 1996.
———. The Third Revolution: Popular Movements in the Revolutionary Era, Vol 2. New York:
Cassell, 1998.
———. The Third Revolution: Popular Movements in the Revolutionary Era, Vol 3. New York:
Continuum, 2004.
———. The Third Revolution: Popular Movements in the Revolutionary Era, Vol 4. New York:
Continuum, 2005.
———. Toward an Ecological Society. Montreal; Buffalo: Black Rose Books, 1980.
———. Urbanization without Cities: The Rise and Decline of Citizenship. Montreal; New York:
Black Rose Books, 1992.
———. Which Way for the Ecology Movement?. Oakland, CA: AK Press, 1994.
Bookchin, Dave Foreman, Murray, and Steve Chase. Defending the Earth: A Dialogue Between
Murray Bookchin and Dave Foreman. Cambridge, MA: South End Press, 1991.
Bookchin, Murray, and Eirik Eiglad. Social Ecology and Communalism. Oakland, CA: AK Press,
2007.
Bookchin, Murray, and Eiglad Eirik. Social Ecology and Communalism. Oakland, CA: Ak Press,
2007.
Bortman, Marci, Mary Ann Cunningham, and Peter Brimblecombe. Environmental Encyclopedia. 3rd
ed. Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson Gale, 2002.
Bostrom, Magnus. “Environmental Organisation in New Forms of Political Participation: Ecological
Modernisation and the Making of Voluntary Rules.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Botetzagias, Iosif. “Clinging On? The Cypriot Greens.” Environmental Politics 16 (February 2007):
124–29.
Boucher, Douglas H. “Modernity’s Dead, Nature Is Dying, and Culture’s Not Feeling Too Well.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 115–20.
Bowers, C. A. “Conservation, Class Struggle, or Both: A Response to C.A. Bowers.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 109–18.
Bowring, Finn. “André Gorz: Ecology, System and Lifeworld.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6
(1995): 65–84.
Brand, Urlich, and Christoph Gorg. “The Regulation of the Market and the Transformation of the
Societal Relationships with Nature.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 67–94.
Braun, Bruce, Sarah J. Whatmore, and Isabelle Stengers. Political Matter: Technoscience,
Democracy, and Public Life. U of Minnesota Press, 2010.
Breen, Sheryl D. “Ecocentrism, Weighted Interests, and Property Theory.” Environmental Politics 10
(2001).
Brennan, Andrew. “Environmental Literacy.” Environmental Values 3 (1994).
———. “Moral Pluralism and the Economy.” Environmental Values 1 (1992).
———. “Poverty, Puritanism, and Environmental Conflict.” Environmental Values 7 (1998).
Bretherton, Charlotte. “Movements, Networks, Hierarchies: A Gender Perspective on Global
Environmental Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 3 (2003).
Briggs, Chad. “Science and Environmental Risk: The Case of Perchlorate Contamination in
California.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 532–49.
Bronner, Stephen Eric. “Ecology, Politics, and Risk: The Social Theory of Ulrich Beck.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 67–86.
Brook, Isis. “Convergence, Divergence, and the Complex Nature of Environmental Problems.”
Environmental Values 17 (2009): 1–3.
Brown, Lester R. Building a Sustainable Society. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 1981.
———. Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Co.,
2001.
———. Human Needs and the Security of Nations. New York, NY: Foreign Policy Association, 1978.
———. In the Human Interest: A Strategy to Stabilize World Population. New York, NY: W. W.
Norton & Co., 1974.
———. Outgrowing the Earth: The Food Security Challenge in the Age of Falling Water Tables and
Rising Temperatures. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 2004.
———. Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble. 1st ed. New York, NY:
W. W. Norton & Co., 2003.
———. Seeds of Change: The Green Revolution and Development in the 1970’s. New York, NY:
Praeger Publishers for the Overseas Development Council, 1970.
———. The Agricultural Link: How Environmental Deterioration Could Disrupt Economic Progress.
Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute, 1997.
———. The Changing World Food Prospect: The Nineties and Beyond. Worldwatch Papers.
Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute, 1988.
———. The Twenty-Ninth Day: Accommodating Human Needs and Numbers to the Earth’s
Resources. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 1978.
———. The World Watch Reader on Global Environmental Issues. New York, NY: W. W. Norton &
Co., 1991.
———. U.S. and Soviet Agriculture: The Shifting Balance of Power. Worldwatch Papers.
Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute, 1982.
———. Who Will Feed China?: Wake-Up Call for a Small Planet. New York, NY: W. W. Norton &
Co., 1995.
———. World Without Borders. New York, NY: Random House, 1972.
Brown, Lester R., Christopher Flavin, and Sandra Postel. Saving the Planet: How to Shape an
Environmentally Sustainable Global Economy. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 1991.
Brown, Lester R., and Erik P. Eckholm. By Bread Alone. New York, NY: Praeger, 1974.
Brown, Lester R., and Gail W. Finsterbusch. Man and His Environment: Food. New York: Harper and
Row, 1972.
Brown, Lester R., Gary T. Gardner, Brian Halweil, and Linda Starke. Beyond Malthus: Sixteen
Dimensions of the Population Problem. Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute, 1998.
Brown, Lester R, and Jodi L. Jacobson. The Future of Urbanization: Facing the Ecological and
Economic Constraints. Worldwatch Papers. Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute, 1987.
Brown, Lester R., Janet Larsen, and Bernie Fischlowitz-Roberts. Earth Policy Reader. New York,
NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 2002.
Brown, Lester R, and Hal Kane. Full House: Reassessing the Earth’s Population Carrying Capacity.
New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 1994.
Brown, Lester R., Michael Renner, Linda Starke, and Brian Halweil. Vital Signs 2000: The
Environmental Trends That Are Shaping Our Future. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 2000.
Brown, Lester R., Patricia L. McGrath, and Bruce Stokes. Twenty-Two Dimensions of the Population
Problem. Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute, 1976.
Brown, Lester R., and Edward C. Wolf. Soil Erosion: Quiet Crisis in the World Economy.
Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute, 1984.
Brown, Mark B. Science in Democracy: Expertise, Institutions, and Representation. MIT Press, 2009.
Brule, Robert J. “Habermas and Green Political Thought: Two Roads Converging.” Environmental
Politics 11 (2002).
Brulle, Robert J. Agency, Democracy, and Nature: The U.S Environmental Movement from a Critical
Theory Perspective. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2000.
Brulle, Robert J, and David Naguib Pellow. Power, Justice, and the Environment: A Critical
Appraisal of the Environmental Justice Movement. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2005.
Buell, John. “Ecopopulism, Democracy, and Individuality.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995):
59–66.
Buhle, Paul. “Conservationist Liberalism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 109–12.
———. “First Wave Eco-Socialism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000): 38–40.
———. “Planetary Liberation/animal Rights.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 10 (1999): 41–44.
Bulkeley, Harriet. “Participation and Environmental Governance: Consensus, Ambivalence, and
Debate.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Burkett, Paul. “Capitalization Verses Socialization of Nature.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995):
92–100.
———. “Marxism and Ecology a Comment on Lipietz.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000):
90–96.
———. “Marx’s Ecology and the Limits of Contemporary Ecosocialism.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 12 (2001): 126–33.
———. “On Some Common Misconceptions about Nature and Marx’s Critique of Political
Economy.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 57–80.
Busenberg, George J. “The Evolution of Vigilance: Disasters, Sentinels, and Policy Change.”
Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Buttel, Frederick. “The Environmental and Post-Environmental Politics of Genetically Modified
Crops and Foods.” Environmental Politics 14 (2005): 309–23.
Cahn, Matthew A. Environmental Deceptions: The Tension Between Liberalism and Environmental
Policymaking in the United States. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1995.
Calhoon, Lawrence. “Our Recent Rousseau: On Paul Shepard.” Environmental Philosophy 3 (2006).
Callicott, J. Baird. “Silencing Philosophers.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
———. “The Pragmatic Power and Promise of Theoretical Environmental Ethics: Forging a New
Discourse.” Environmental Values 11 (2002).
Cameron, W. S. K. “Heidegger’s Concept of the Environment in Being and Time.” Environmental
Philosophy 1 (2004).
Caney, Simon. “Human Rights, Climate Change, and Discounting.” Environmental Politics 17
(August 2008): 536–55.
Cannavo, Peter. “The Working Landscape: Work, Place and the Foundations of Green, Democratic
Politics.” The MIT Press, 2007.
Cardoso, Catarina. “Local Communities and Local Forests: Participation in India and the USA.”
Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Carlassare, Elizabeth. “Destabilizing the Criticism of Essentialism in Ecofeminist Discourse.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 50–66.
Carlson, Allen. “The Requirements for An Adequate Aesthetics of Nature.” Environmental
Philosophy 4 (2007).
Carolan, Michael S. “Ecological Representation in Deliberation: The Contribution of Tactile Spaces.”
Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 345–61.
———. “From Patent Law to Regulation: The Ontological Gerrymandering of Biotechnology.”
Environmental Politics 17 (November 2008): 749–65.
———. “’I Do Therefore There Is’: Enlivening Socio-Environmental Theory.” Environmental
Politics 18 (June 2009): 1–17.
———. “Ontological Politics: Mapping a Complex Environmental Problem.” Environmental Values
13 (2004): 497–522.
———. “Risk, Trust, and ’The Beyond’ of the Environment: A Brief Look at the Recent Case of Mad
Cow Disease in the United States.” Environmental Values 15 (2006): 233–52.
———. “The Multidimensionality of Environmental Problems: The GMO Controversy and the
Limits of Scientific Materialism.” Environmental Values 17 (2008): 67–82.
———. “The Politics in Environmental Science: The Endangered Species Act and the Preble’s
Mouse Controversy.” Environmental Politics 17 (June 2008): 449–65.
Carolan, Michael S., and Michael M. Bell. “In Truth We Trust: Discourse, Phenomenology, and the
Social Relations of Knowledge in an Environmental Dispute.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Carter, Alan. A Radical Green Political Theory. 1st ed. Routledge Innovations in Political Theory, 1.
London: Routledge, 1999.
———. “Can We Harm Future People?” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
———. “Human Nature.” Environmental Values 9 (2000).
———. “Some Theoretical Foundations for Radical Green Politics.” Environmental Values 13
(2004): 305–28.
Carter, Neil. The Politics of the Environment: Ideas, Activism, Policy. 2nd ed. Cambridge; New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2007.
———. “Transforming Environmental Policy: Does Europe Lead the Way?” Environmental Politics
16 (2007): 523–28.
Carter, Neil, and Meg Huby. “Ecological Citizenship and Ethical Investment.” Environmental Politics
14 (2005): 255–72.
Chalecki, Elizabeth L. “A New Vigilance: Identifying and Reducing the Risks of Environmental
Terrorism.” Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 46–64.
Chaloupka, William. “Green Naturalism: The Politicization of Environmental Theory.” Political
Theory 31 (2003): 871–82.
Chan, Sander, and Philipp Pattberg. “Private Rule-Making and the Politics of Accountability:
Analyzing Global Forest Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 103–21.
Chapman, Ann. “The Ways That Nature Matters: The World and the Earth in the Thought of Hannah
Arendt.” Environmental Values 16 (2007): 433–45.
Chapman, Robert. “The Eco-Pre-Fix: Reading ’Conservation as Enclosure’.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 17 (2006): 48–57.
Chapman, Robert L. “Immigration and Environment: Settling the Moral Boundaries.” Environmental
Values 9 (2000).
Charman, Karen. “False Starts and False Solutions: Current Approaches in Dealing with Climate
Change.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 19 (2008): 29–47.
Checker, Melissa. Polluted Promises: Environmental Racism and the Search for Justice in a Southern
Town. NYU Press, 2005.
Christoff, Peter. “Ecological Modernisation, Ecological Modernities.” Environmental Politics 5
(1996).
Cinelli, Manlio. “Environmental Campaigns and Socio-Political Cleavages in Divided Societies.”
Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
Clapp, Jennifer. “Global Environmental Governance for Corporate Responsibility and
Accountability.” Global Environmental Politics 5 (2005): 23–34.
———. “Transnational Corporate Interests and Global Environmental Governance: Negotiating Rules
for Agricultural Biotechnology and Chemicals.” Environmental Politics 12 (2003): 1–23.
———. “What the Pollution Havens Debate Overlooks.” Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002):
11–19.
Clarke, Melissa. “Ontology, Ethics, and Sentir: Properly Situating Merleau-Ponty.” Environmental
Values 11 (2002).
Clark, John. “A Social Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 3–33.
———. “Contributions to the Critique of Political Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001):
29–36.
———. “On Being None with Nature: Nagarjuna and the Ecology of Emptiness.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 19 (2008): 6–29.
———. “The Matter of Freedom: Ecofeminist Lesson for Social Ecology.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 11 (2000): 62–80.
———. “The Microecology of Community.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 15 (2004): 69–79.
Clark, John P. “Alan Dordoy and Mary Mellor’s ‘Ecosocialism and Feminism.’” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 12 (2001): 87–91.
Clark, Mary E. “Tasks for Future Ecologists.” Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Cohen, Maurie J. “Science and Society in Historical Perspective.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
———. “The Songlines of Risk.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Coleman, Frank. “Picking the ‘Locke’ of ‘Nature’s Nation’: Nature, National Landscape, and the Ad
Industry.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 75–94.
Coleman, Frank M. “The Prosthetic God: Thomas Hobbes, the Bible, and Modernity.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 4 (1993): 89–111.
Conca, Ken. “Consumption and Environment in a Global Economy.” Global Environmental Politics 1
(2001): 53–71.
———. “Ecology in an Age of Empire: A Reply to (and Extension Of) Dalby’s Imperial Thesis.”
Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 12–19.
Conca, Ken, Thomas Princen, and Michael F. Maniates. “Confronting Consumption.” Global
Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 1–10.
Connelly, James. “Faking It: Values, Nature, and Environment.” Environmental Politics 7 (1998).
———. “Who Will Save the World?” Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
Connelly, James, and Graham Smith. Politics and the Environment: From Theory to Practice. 2nd ed.
Environmental Politics Series. London: Routledge, 2003.
Contreras, Walt, and Derek Wall. “The Enemy of Nature and the Nature of the Enemy.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 13 (2002): 155–66.
Coppinger, Raymond, Stanley Warner, Elisabeth Clemence, and Mark Feinstein. “Global Population
Growth and The Demise of Nature.” Environmental Valules 5 (1996).
Correggia, Marinella. “Where Reds Meet Greens - Comrade Animals.” Capitalism Nature Socialism
12 (2001): 137–40.
Cronon, William. Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England. New
York, NY: Hill and Wang, 1983.
———. Nature’s Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. New York, NY: W. W. Norton &
Company, 1991.
———. Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature. New York: W. W. Norton &
Company, 1996.
———. Uncommon Ground: Toward Reinventing Nature. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company,
1995.
Crowley, Kate. “Nature: Reinvention, Restoration, or Preservation.” Environmental Politics 5 (1996).
Cullet, Philippe, and Jawahar Raja. “Intellectual Property Rights and Biodiversity Management: The
Case of India.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 97–114.
Curry, Patrick. “Re-Thinking Nature: Towards an Eco-Pluralism.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Dalby, Simon. “Conflict, Ecology, and the Politics of Environmental Security.” Global Environmental
Politics 2 (2002): 125–30.
———. “Ecological Metaphors of Security: World Politics in the Biosphere.” Alternatives: Global,
Local, Political 23 (1998).
———. “Ecological Politics, Violence, and the Theme of Empire.” Global Environmental Politics 4
(2004): 1–11.
Dandy, Norman. “Consensus on Contemporary Conservation?” Environmental Politics 13 (2004):
657–62.
———. “Wildlife Advocates: The Individual in Conservation Politics.” Environmental Politics 15
(2006): 485–89.
Darling, Eliza. “The Lorax Redux: Profit Biggering and Some Selective Silences in American
Environmentalism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 51–66.
Daugbjerg, Carsten, and Gert Tinggaard Svendsen. “Designing Green Taxes in a Political Context:
From Optimal to Feasible Enviornmental Regulation.” Environmental Politics 12 (2003): 76–95.
Davies, Anna. “What Silence Knows–Planning, Public Participation, and Environmental Values.”
Environmental Values 10 (2001).
Davion, Victoria. “Anthropocentrism, Artificial Intelligence, and Moral Network Theory: An
Ecofeminist Approach.” Environmental Values 11 (2002).
Davis, Mark. “Marx and the Climates of War.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 23–29.
Davis, R. G. “From Brecht to an Ecological Aesthetic.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 9 (1998):
103–13.
Dawson, Jane I. “Nature and National Identity after Communism: Globalizing the Ethnoscape.”
Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 158–60.
———. “The Two Faces of Economic Justice: Lessons from the Eco-Nationalist Phenomenon.”
Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Death, Carl. “1 Critical, Environmental, Political.” Critical Environmental Politics, 2013.
Deb, Debal. “Development Against Freedom and Sustainability.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 17
(2007): 49–70.
Deblonde, Marian K. “Environmental Economcis: The Meaning of an ’Objective’ Policy Science.”
Environmental Values 9 (2000).
De Geus, Marius. The End of over-Consumption: Towards a Lifestyle of Moderation and
Self-Restraint. Intl Books, 2003.
Deleage, Jean Paul. “Eco-Marxist Critique of Political Economy.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 1
(1990): 15–31.
Demirovic, Alex. “Ecological Crisis and the Future of Democracy.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 1
(1990): 40–61.
Depledge, Joanna. “Rising from the Ashes: The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety.” Environmental
Politics 9 (2000).
Der Derian, J. “9/11: Before, after and in between.” Understanding September 11 (2002): 177–90.
de-Shalit, Avner. “From Malthus to Six Billion - and Back.” Environmental Politics 13 (2004):
781–85.
De-Shalit, Avner. The Environment: Between Theory and Practice. Oxford University Press Oxford,
2000.
de-Shalit, Avner. “Thirty Years of Environmental Theory: From Value Theory and Meta-Ethics to
Political Theory.” Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 9 (March
2006): 85–105.
DeSombre, Elizabeth R., and J. Samuel Barkin. “Turtles and Trade: The WTO’s Acceptance of
Environmental Trade Restrictions.” Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 12–18.
De Soysa, I. “6. The Resource Curse: Are Civil Wars Driven by Rapacity or Paucity?,” 2000.
De Soysa, Indra. “Ecoviolence: Shrinking Pie or Honey Pot?” Global Environmental Politics 2
(2002): 1–34.
Devall, Bill, and George Sessions. Deep Ecology: Living as If Nature Mattered. New. Layton, UT:
Gibbs Smith Publisher, 2001.
Devine, Pat, and Peter Dickens. “On the Metabolism between Society and Nature in the U.K.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 17–19.
De Vries, R. B. M. “Intrinsic Value and the Genetic Engineering of Animals.” Environmental Values
17 (2008): 375–92.
Diani, Mario, and Elisa Rambaldo. “Still the Time for Environmental Movements? A Local
Perspective.” Environmental Politics 16 (2007): 765–84.
Dickson, Barnabas. “The Ethicist Conception of Environmental Problems.” Environmental Values 9
(2000).
Diehm, Christian. “Deep Ecology and Phenomenology.” Environmental Philosophy 1 (2004).
———. “Ethics and Natural History: Levinas and Other-Than-Human Animals.” Environmental
Philosophy 3 (2006).
Dimitrov, Radoslav S. “Hostage to Norms: States, Institutions, and Global Forest Policies.” Global
Environmental Politics 5 (2005): 1–24.
Dobson, Andrew. “Being Human and Living Sustainably: A Journey Through Time and an Account
of Place.” Environmental Politics 14 (2005): 409–12.
———. “Biocentrism and Genetic Engineering.” Environmental Values 4 (1995).
———. “Changing Places? Humans and Other Animals.” Environmental Politics 12 (2003).
———. Citizenship and the Environment. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2004.
———. Conservation and Biodiversity. New York, NY: Scientific American Library, 1996.
———. “Ecological Citizenship: A Defence.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 447–51.
———. Fairness and Futurity: Essays on Environmental Sustainability and Social Justice. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1999.
———. “Genetic Engineering: Pigoons and ChickieNobs on the Other Side of ’Enough’.”
Environmental Politics 13 (2004): 642–49.
———. Green Political Thought. 4th ed. London: Routledge, 2007.
———. Justice and the Environment: Conceptions of Environmental Sustainability and Theories of
Distributive Justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.
———. “Nature (and Politics).” Environmental Values 17 (2008): 285–301.
———. “The ’C’-Word.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 661–65.
———. The Green Reader: Essays Toward a Sustainable Society. 1st ed. San Francisco, CA:
Mercury House, 1991.
———. The Politics of Nature: Explorations in Green Political Theory. 1st ed. London: Routledge,
1995.
Dobson, Andrew, and Derek Bell. Environmental Citizenship. London; Cambridge, MA: The MIT
Press, 2006.
Dobson, Andrew, and Robyn Eckersley. Political Theory and the Ecological Challenge. Edited by
Andrew Dobson and Robyn Eckersley. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 2006.
Doherty, Brian. “Friends of the Earth International: Negotiating a Transnational Identity.”
Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 860–80.
Doherty, Brian, and Timothy Doyle. “Beyond Borders: Transnational Politics, Social Movements, and
Modern Environmentalisms.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 697–712.
Dolatyar, Mostafa, and Tim S. Gray. “The Politics of Water Scarcity in the Middle East.”
Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Dordoy, Alan, and Mary Mellor. “Ecosocialism and Feminism: Deep Materialism and the
Contradictions of Capitalism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000): 41–61.
———. “John P. Clark’s ‘Ecofeminist Lessons for Social Ecology.’” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12
(2001): 92–98.
Douglas, Heather. “Boundaries Between Science and Policy: Descriptive Difficulty and Normative
Desirability.” Environmental Philosophy 2 (2005).
Dower, Nigel. “Human Development–Friend or Foe to Environmental Ethics?” Environmental Values
9 (2000).
Downie, David. “Paths to a Green World: The Political Economy of the Global Environment.” Global
Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 128–30.
Doyle, Timothy, and Brian Doherty. “Green Public Spheres and the Green Governance State: The
Politics of Emancipation and Ecological Conditionality.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006):
881–92.
Drengson, Alan, and Yuichi Inoue. The Deep Ecology Movement: An Introductory Anthology.
Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books, 1995.
Drevensek, Mojca. “Negotiation as the Driving Force of Environmental Citizenship.” Environmental
Politics 14 (2005): 226–38.
Dryzek, John S. Deliberative Democracy and Beyond: Liberals, Critics, Contestations. New York:
Oxford University Press, 2002.
———. Deliberative Global Politics: Discourse and Democracy in a Divided World. Cambridge:
Polity, 2006.
———. Discursive Democracy: Politics, Policy, and Political Science. Cambridge; New York:
Cambridge University Press, 1990.
———. “Ecology and Discursive Democracy: Beyond Liberal Capitalism and the Administrative
State.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 3 (1992): 18–42.
———. Postcommunist Democratization: Political Discourses across Thirteen Countries. New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2002.
———. Rational Ecology: Environment and Political Economy. New York, NY: Basil Blackwell,
1987.
———. “Resistance Is Fertile.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 11–17.
———. The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Oxford
University Press, 2005.
Dryzek, John S., Daid Downs, Hans-Kristian Hernes, and David Schlosberg. Green States and Social
Movements: Environmentalism in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and Norway.
New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Dryzek, John S, and David Schlosberg. Debating the Earth: The Environmental Politics Reader. 2nd
ed. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Dunlap, Thomas R. “Environmentalism: A Secular Faith.” Environmental Values 15 (2006): 321–30.
Dunlop, Claire. “GMOs and Regulatory Styles.” Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Eckersley, Robyn. “Beyond Human Racism.” Environmental Values 7 (1998).
———. Environmentalism and Political Theory: Toward an Ecocentric Approach. New York, NY:
State University of New York Press, 1992.
———. Markets, the State, and the Environment: Towards Integration. London: Palgrave MacMillan,
1995.
———. “The Discourse Ethic and the Problem of Representing Nature.” Environmental Politics 8
(1999).
———. The Green State: Rethinking Democracy and Sovereignty. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press,
2004.
———. “The Political Challenge of Left Green Reconciliation.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6
(1995): 21–25.
Economy, Elizabeth. “Environmental Governance: The Emerging Economic Dimension.”
Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 171–89.
Edelglass, William. “Moral Pluralism, Skillful Means, and Environmental Philosophy.”
Environmental Philosophy 3 (2006).
Ekeli, Kristian Skagen. “Environmental Risks, Uncertainty, and Intergenerational Ethics.”
Environmental Values 13 (2004): 421–48.
Elliot, Robert. “Facts About Natural Values.” Environmental Values 5 (1996).
Ely, John. “An Ecological Ethic? Left Aristotelian Marxism versus the Aristotelian Right.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 1 (1990): 143–54.
Embree, Lester. “A Beginning for the Phenomenological Theory of Primate Ethology.” Environmental
Philosophy 5 (2008).
———. “A Beginning for the Phenomenological Theory of Primate Ethology.” Environmental
Philosophy 5 (2008).
Enoch, Simon. “A Greener Potemkin Village? Corporate Social Responsibility and the Limits of
Growth.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 79–90.
Epstein, Barbara. “The Environmental Justice/toxics Movement: Politics of Race and Gender.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 63–87.
Ervine, Kate. “The Greying of Green Governance: Power Politics and the Global Environment
Facility.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 125–42.
Evanoff, Richard. “Reconciling Self, Society, and Nature in Environmental Ethics.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 107–14.
Evanoff, Richard J. “Reconciling Realism and Constructivism in Environmental Ethics.”
Environmental Values 14 (2005): 61–81.
Everett, Michael D., and Robert Peplies. “The Political Economy of Environmental Movements: U.S.
Experience and Global Movements.” Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Faber, Daniel, and Allison Grossman. “The Political Ecology of Marxism.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 11 (2000): 71–77.
Faber, Malte, Reiner Manstetten, and John L. R. Proops. “Humankind and the Environment.”
Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Falkner, Robert. “Private Environmental Governance and International Relations.” Global
Environmental Politics 3 (2003).
———. “The First Meeting of the Parties to the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety.” Environmental
Politics 13 (2004): 635–41.
Farrell, Katharine. “Critical Political Ecology: The Politics of Environmental Science.”
Environmental Values 13 (2004): 403–6.
Feenberg, Andrew. “The Critical Theory of Technology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 1 (1990):
17–45.
Ferre, Frederick, and Peter Hartel. Ethics and Environmental Policy: Theory Meets Practice. Athens,
GA: University of Georgia Press, 1994.
Field, Rodger C. “Risk and Justice: Capitalist Production and the Environment.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 8 (1997): 69–94.
Fifer, Nichole M. “Climate Change, International Interests, and the Future.” Global Environmental
Politics 8 (2008): 141–45.
Fine, Ben. “From Actor-Network Theory to Political Economy.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16
(2005): 91–108.
Firth, Dan. “Do Meaningful Relationships with Nature Contribute to a Worthwhile Life?”
Environmental Values 17 (2008): 145–64.
Fisher, Andy. Radical Ecopsychology: Psychology in the Service of Life. Albany, NY: State University
of New York Press, 2002.
Fisher, Dana R., and Jessica F. Green. “Understanding Disenfranchisement: Civil Society and
Developing Countries’ Influence and Participation in Global Governance for Sustainable
Development.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 65–84.
Fitzpatrick, Tony, and Caron Caldwell. “Towards a Theory of Ecosocial Welfare: Radical Reformism
and Local Exchanges and Trading Systems (LETS).” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
FitzSimmons, Margaret, Joseph Glaser, Roberto Monte Mor, Stephanie Pincetl, and Chella Rajan.
“Environmentalism and the Liberal State.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 2 (1991): 1–16.
Flannery, Tim. The Weather Makers: How Man Is Changing the Climate and What It Means for Life
on Earth. London: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2006.
Florini, Ann. “Making Transparency Work.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 14–16.
Focht, Will. “Governance for Sustainability.” Environmental Politics 17 (February 2008): 131–37.
Ford, Lucy H. “Challenging Global Enviromental Governance: Social Movements Agency and Global
Civil Society.” Global Environmental Politics 3 (2003).
Foreman, David. Confessions of an Eco-Warrior. New York: Three Rivers Press, 1992.
Forsyth, Timothy. Critical Political Ecology: The Politics of Environmental Science. 1st ed. London:
Routledge, 2002.
Foster, John B. Ecology Against Capitalism. New York: Monthly Review Press, 2002.
———. Marx’s Ecology: Materialism and Nature. New York: Monthly Review Press, 2000.
Foster, John Bellamy. “Market Fetishism and the Attack on Social Reason: A Comment on Hayek,
Polanyi, and Wainwright.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 101–7.
———. Marx’s Ecology: Materialism and Nature. NYU Press, 2000.
———. “The Absolute General Law of Environmental Degradation under Capitalism.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 3 (1992): 77–81.
Francis, John M. “Nature Conservation and the Precautionary Principle.” Environmental Values 5
(1996).
Franquemagne, Gael. “From Larzac to the Altermondalist Mobilisation: Space in Environmental
Movements.” Environmental Politics 16 (2007): 826–43.
Friend, Anthony M. “Economics, Ecology, and Sustainable Development: Are They Compatible?”
Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Frodeman, Robert. “Environmental Philosophy and the Shaping of Public Policy.” Environmental
Philosophy 1 (2004).
———. “The Role of Humanities Policy in Public Science.” Environmental Philosophy 2 (2005).
Fuchs, Doris A., and Sylvia Lorek. “Sustainable Consumption Governance in a Globalizing World.”
Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 19–45.
Furze, Brian. “Ecologically Sustainable Rural Development and the Difficulty of Social Change.”
Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Gale, Fred P., and R. Michael M’Gonigle. Nature, Production, Power: Towards an Ecological
Political Economy. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2000.
Gallagher, Kevin P. “Confronting the Coffee Crisis: Fair Trade, Sustainable Livelihoods, Adn
Ecosystems in Mexico and Central America.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 159–61.
Garcia, Ernest. “Myth, Politics, and the Global/local Debate.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996):
121–25.
Gare, Arran. “Creating an Ecological Socialist Future.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000):
41–58.
Gareau, Brian J. “We Have Never Been Human: Agential Nature, ANT, and Marxist Political
Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 127–40.
Garner, Robert. “Animals, Politics, and Justice: Rawlsian Liberalism and the Plight of Non-Humans.”
Environmental Politics 12 (2003).
Gatersleben, Birgitta. “Psychological Theories for Environmental Issues.” Environmental Values 13
(2004): 547–50.
Ghotge, Sanjeev. “A Political Manifesto for the Greening of India.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 15
(2004): 99–110.
Giri, Saroj. “Nature, Human Labor and the Limit of the Social.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 15
(2004): 65–78.
Godfrey, Phoebe. “Diane Wilson vs. Union Carbide: Ecofeminism and the Elitist Charge of
‘Essentialism.’” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 37–56.
Godfrey, Phoebe C. “Ecofeminist Cosmology in Practice: Genesis Farm and the Embodiment of
Sustainable Solutions.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 19 (2008): 96–114.
Godlovitch, Stan. “Offending Against Nature.” Environmental Values 7 (1998).
Godrej, Farah. “Ascetics, Warriors, and a Gandhian Ecological Citizenship.” Political Theory 40
(August 2012): 437–65. doi:10.1177/0090591712444843.
Goldman, Michael, James O’Connor, James Ely, Daniel Faber, and David Peerla. “Ideologies of
Environmental Crisis: Technology and Its Discontents.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 1 (1990):
91–106.
Goldstein, Jesse. “Ecofeminism in Theory and Praxis.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 17 (2006):
96–102.
Gollain, Francoise. “Anti-Globalisation Movements: Making and Reversing History.” Environmental
Politics 11 (2002).
Gonzalez, George A. “The Future of the Planet: Technology, Climate Change, and Oil Depletion.”
Environmental Politics 16 (February 2007): 142–46.
Goodin, Robert E. Green Political Theory. Cambridge, UK; Cambridge, MA: Polity Press, 1992.
———. No Smoking: The Ethical Issues. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1989.
———. Protecting the Vulnerable: A Reanalysis of Our Social Responsibilities. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1985.
———. The Politics of the Environment. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing, 1994.
Good, Justin. “Modernity’s Confrontation with Water and Earth.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18
(2007): 121–25.
Gorg, Christoph, and Ulrich Brand. “Contested Regimes in the International Political Economy:
Global Regulation of Genetic Resources and the Internationalization of the State.” Global
Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 101–23.
Gorz, Andre. Capitalism, Socialism, Ecology. London; New York: Verso, 1994.
———. Ecology as Politics. Toronto: Black Rose Books, 1980.
Gorz, Andre, and Chris Turner. Capitalism, Socialism, Ecology. New York: Verso, 2004.
Gottlieb, Robert. Environmentalism Unbound: Exploring New Pathways for Change. Cambridge,
MA: The MIT Press, 2002.
Gottlieb, Roger. “Globalization and Its Alternatives.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003):
163–65.
———. “Spiritual Deep Ecology and the Left: An Effort at Reconciliation.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 6 (1995): 1–21.
Gottlieb, Roger S. “Spiritual Deep Ecology Revisited.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 41–45.
Greenbaum, Allan. “Environmental Thought as Cosmological Intervention.” Environmental Values 8
(1999).
Greenberg, Nadivah. “Shop Right: American Conservatisms, Consumption, and the Environment.”
Global Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 85–111.
Greenwood, Dan. “The Halfway House: Democracy, Complexity, and the Limits to Markets in Green
Political Economy.” Environmental Politics 16 (2008 2007): 73–91.
Gregory, Robin S. “Incorporating Value Trade-Offs into Community-Based Environmental Risk
Decisions.” Environmental Values 11 (2002).
Grendstad, Gunnar. “The New Ecological Paradigm Scale: Examination and Scale Analysis.”
Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Grove-White, Robin, and Bronislaw Szerszynski. “Getting Behind Environmental Ethics.”
Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Grundmann, Reiner. “Climate Change and Knowledge Politics.” Environmental Politics 16 (2007):
414–32.
Guattari, Felix. The Three Ecologies. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2005.
Guehlstorf, Nicholas P. The Political Theories of Risk Analysis. 1st ed. The International Library of
Environmental, Agricultural and Food Ethics. New York: Springer, 2005.
Gulbrandsen, Lars H. “The Evolving Forest Regime and Domestic Actors: Strategic or Normative
Adaptation?” Environmental Politics 12 (2003).
———. “The Role of Science in Environmental Governance: Competing Knowledge Producers in
Swedish Adn Norwegian Forestry.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 99–122.
Gunn, Alastair. “Perspectives on Environmental Ethics.” Global Environmental Politics 9 (2009):
136–41.
Gupte, Manjusha, and Robert V. Bartlett. “Necessary Preconditions for Deliberative Environmental
Democracy? Challenging the Modernity Bias of Current Theory.” Global Environmental Politics
7 (2007): 94–106.
Haas, Peter M. “Addressing the Global Governance Deficit.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004):
1–15.
———. “Constructing Environmental Conflicts from Resource Scarcity.” Global Environmental
Politics 2 (2002): 1–11.
Hahnel, Robin. “Eco-Localism: A Constructive Critique.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007):
62–78.
Hailwood, Simon. “Environmental Citizenship as Reasonable Citizenship.” Environmental Politics 14
(2005): 195–210.
Hailwood, Simon A. “The Value of Nature’s Otherness.” Environmental Values 9 (2000).
Hajer, Maarten, and Sven Kesselring. “Democracy in the Risk Society? Learning from the New
Politics of Mobility in Munich.” Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Hajer, Maarten, and Wytske Versteeg. “A Decade of Discourse Analysis of Environmental Politics:
Achievements, Challenges, Perspectives.” Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 7, no. 3
(2005): 175–84.
———. “A Decade of Discourse Analysis of Environmental Politics: Achievements, Challenges,
Perspectives.” Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 7 (2005): 175–84.
———. “A Decade of Discourse Analysis of Environmental Politics: Achievements, Challenges,
Perspectives.” Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 7, no. 3 (September 1, 2005):
175–84. doi:10.1080/15239080500339646.
Hajer, M., and W. Versteeg. “A Decade of Discourse Analysis of Environmental Politics:
Achievements, Challenges, Perspectives.” Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 7
(2005): 175–84.
Hall, Alan, and Veronika Mogyorody. “The Marketing Practices of Ontario’s Organic Farmers: Local
or Global?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 13 (2002): 3–34.
Hallum, Anne, and Rachel Hallum. “Women and Sustainable Agriculture in Guatemala.” SECOLAS
Annals: Journal of the Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies 38 (2006): 93–112.
Hamilton, Paul. “The Greening of Nationalism: Nationalising Nature in Europe.” Environmental
Politics 11 (2002).
Hancock, Jan. “Toxic Pollution as a Right to Harm Others: Contradictions in Feinberg’s Formulation
of the Harm Principle.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 91–108.
Hanley, Nick, Jason F. Shogren, and Ben White. Environmental Economics: In Theory and Practice.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.
Hanson, Meira. “’Sustainability’ Rendered Usable? The Idea of Environmental Space.”
Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Harrison, Kathryn, and Lisa McIntosh Sundstrom. “The Comparative Politics of Climate Change.”
Global Environmental Politics 7 (2007): 1–18.
Harvey, D. A Brief History of Neoliberalism. Oxford University Press, USA, 2007.
Harvey, David. “Reflections on Ecology of Fear.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 10 (1999): 59–63.
Hay, Colin. “Environmental Security and State Legitimacy.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994):
83–97.
Hayes, Graeme. “Politics, Policy-Making, Philosophy: French Greens in Perspective.” Environmental
Politics 12 (2003).
Hay, Peter. Currents in Western Environmental Thought. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press,
2002.
Hay, Peter R. Main Currents in Western Environmental Thought. Indiana University Press, 2002.
Hayward, Tim. Constitutional Environmental Rights. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
———. “Ecological Citizenship: A Rejoinder.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 452–53.
———. “Ecological Citizenship: Justice, Rights, and the Virtue of Resourcefulness.” Environmental
Politics 15 (2006): 435–46.
———. Ecological Thought: An Introduction. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1995.
———. Political Theory and Ecological Values. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1999.
Hayward, Tim, and John O’Neill. Justice, Property and the Environment: Social and Legal
Perspectives. Avebury Series in Philosophy. Aldershot, Hunts, England; Brookfield, VT: Ashgate
Publishing, 1997.
Hein, Hilde. “En/gendering Environmental Thinking.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 4 (1993): 121–25.
Heins, Volker. “Frankenstein Unbound: A Critique of von Gleich’s Fundamentalism on Genetic
Engineering.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 2 (1991): 55–70.
———. “Science and Sustainable Society.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 2 (1991): 39–54.
Herring, Horrace. “Environmental History.” Environmental Politics 5 (1996).
———. “The Search for a Utopian Energy Policy.” Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Heynen, Nik, and Harold A. Perkins. “Scalar Dialectics in Green: Urban Private Property and the
Contradictions of the Neoliberalization of Nature.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005):
99–113.
Heynen, Nik, and Paul Robbins. “The Neoliberalization of Nature: Governance, Privatization,
Enclosure and Valuation.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 5–8.
Heyward, Clare. “Can the All-Affected Principle Include Future Persons? Green Deliberative
Democracy and the Non-Identity Problem.” Environmental Politics 17 (August 2008): 625–43.
Higgs, Eric, Andrew Light, and David Strong. Technology and the Good Life?. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2000.
Hinchman, Lewis P. “Is Environmentalism a Humanism?” Environmental Values 13 (2004): 3–29.
Hines, Colin. “Time to Replace Globalization with Localization.” Global Environmental Politics 3
(2003): 1–7.
Hobbes, Thomas. Leviathan. 1st ed. New York: Touchstone, 1997.
Hobson, Kersty. “Competing Discourses of Sustainable Consumption: Does the ’Rationalisation of
the Lifestyles’ Make Sense?” Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
———. “Environmental Justice: An Anthropocentric Social Justice Critique of How, Where, and
Why Environmental Goods and Bads Are Distributed.” Environmental Politics 13 (2004):
474–81.
Hofrichter, Richard. Toxic Struggles: The Theory and Practice of Environmental Justice. Philadelphia:
New Society Publishers, 1993.
Holden, Barry. Democracy and Global Warming. Political Theory and Contemporary Politics. New
York: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2002.
Horton, Dave. “Local Environmentalism and the Internet.” Environmental Politics 13 (2004): 734–53.
Horton, Stephen. “Rethinking Recycling: The Politics of the Waste Crisis.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 6 (1995): 1–19.
Hough, Peter. “Poisons in the System: The Global Regulation of Hazardous Pesticides.” Global
Environmental Politics 3 (2003).
Houghton, Sir John. Global Warming: The Complete Briefing. 3rd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2004.
Hovden, Eivind. “As If Nature Doesn’t Matter: Ecology, Regime Theory, and International
Relations.” Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Howarth, J. M. “The Crisis of Ecology: A Phenomenological Perspective.” Environmental Values 4
(1995).
Howarth, Richard B. “Intergenerational Justice and the Chain of Obligation.” Environmental Values 1
(1992).
———. “Joint Production and Responsibility in Ecological Economics.” Environmental Values 17
(2008): 111–13.
Hoy, Terry. Toward a Naturalistic Political Theory: Aristotle, Hume, Dewey, Evolutionary Biology,
and Deep Ecology. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, 2000.
Hudis, Peter. “Marx among the Muslims.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 15 (2004): 51–67.
Hughes, Emma. “Dissolving the Nation: Self-Deception and Symbolic Inversion in the GM Debate.”
Environmental Politics 16 (2007): 318–36.
Hughes, J. Donald. “An Environmental Historian Looks at the 21st Century.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 13 (2002): 51–62.
Hughes, Steve, and Rorden Wilkinson. “The Global Compact: Promoting Corporate Responsibility?”
Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Huitema, Dave, and Ton Van Snellenberg. “Policy in Style.” Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Humphrey, Mathew. Political Theory and the Environment: A Reassessment. London: Frank Cass
Publishers, 2001.
Humphrey, Matthew. “Reassessing Ecology and Political Theory.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. “Seeing Is Believing? Aesthetics and the Politics of the Environment.” Environmental
Politics 17 (February 2008): 138–46.
———. “Three Conceptions of Irreversibility and Environmental Ethics: Some Problems.”
Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Humphreys, David. “Life Protective or Carcinogenic Challenge? Global Forests Governance Under
Advanced Capitalism.” Global Environmental Politics 3 (2004).
Hunold, Christian, and John S Dryzek. “Green Political Theory and the State: Context Is Everything.”
Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 17–39.
Ignatow, Gabriel. “From Science to Multiculturalism: Postmodern Trends in Environmental
Organizations.” Global Environmental Politics 5 (2005): 88–113.
Irwin, Ruth. “The Neoliberal State: Environmental Pragmatism and Its Discontents.” Environmental
Politics 16 (2007): 643–58.
Isla, Ana. “Women, Enclosure, and Accumulation: A Rejoinder to Robert Chapman.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 17 (2006): 58–65.
Ivanova, Maria. “The Science and Politics of Global Climate Change: A Guide to the Debate.” Global
Environmental Politics 7 (2007): 145–47.
Jackson, Tim. “Sustainability and the ’Struggle for Existence’: The Critical Role of Metaphor in
Society’s Metabolism.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Jacques, Peter. “Ecology, Distribution, and Identity in the World Politics of Environmental
Skepticism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 19 (2008): 8–28.
———. “The Rearguard of Modernity: Environmental Skepticism as a Struggle of Citizenship.”
Global Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 76–101.
Jacques, Peter J., Riley E. Dunlap, and Mark Freeman. “The Organization of Denial: Conservative
Think Tanks and Environmental Scepticism.” Environmental Politics 17 (June 2008): 349–85.
Jagers, Sverker C., and Goran Duus-Otterstrom. “Dual Climate Change Responsibility: On Moral
Divergences Between Migration and Adaptation.” Environmental Politics 17 (August 2008):
576–91.
Jaggers, Sverker C. “In Search of the Ecological Citizen.” Environmental Politics 18 (June 2009):
18–36.
Jahn, Detlef. “Mainstream Economics: A Failure to Grow.” Environmental Politics 6 (1997).
Jamison, Andrew. The Making of Green Knowledge: Environmental Politics and Cultural
Transformation. 1st ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.
Jamison, Andrew, and Erik Baark. “National Shades of Green.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Janicke, Marin, and Klaus Jacob. “Lead Markets for Environmental Innovations: A New Role for the
Nation State.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 29–46.
Janzen, Russell. “Reconsidering the Politics of Nature: Henri Lefebvre and The Production of Space.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 13 (2002): 96–116.
Jasanoff, Sheila. “New Modernities: Reimagining Science, Technology, and Development.”
Environmental Values 11 (2002).
Jayal, Niraja Gopal. “Balancing Political and Ecological Values.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Jhaveri, Nayna J. “Consuming Ecologies: Emergent Environmental Studies.” Global Environmental
Politics 3 (2003).
Johns, David, Joel Kovel, and Michael Lowy. “Has Ecosocialism Passed on the Tough Questions?”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 120–28.
Johnson, Baylor L. “Ethical Obligations in a Tragedy of the Commons.” Environmental Values 12
(2003).
Johnson, Lawrence E. “Future Generations and Contemporary Ethics.” Environmental Values 12
(2003).
Johnston, Josee. “Who Cares about the Commons?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 1–41.
Jordan, Andrew, Rudiger K. W. Wurzel, and Anthony R. Zito. “’New’ Instruments of Environmental
Governance: Patterns and Pathways of Change.” Environmental Politics 12 (2003).
Kamminga, Menno R. “The Ethics of Climate Politics: Four Models of Moral Discourse.”
Environmental Politics 17 (August 2008): 673–92.
Karkkainen, Bardley C. “Post-Sovereign Environmental Governance.” Global Environmental Politics
4 (2004): 72–96.
Kassiola, Joel J. “Can Environmental Ethics ’Solve’ Environmental Problems and Save the World?
Yes, but First We Must Recognise the Essential Normative Nature of Environmental Problems.”
Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Kassiola, John. Explorations in Environmental Political Theory: Thinking About What We Value. New
York: M. E. Sharpe, 2003.
Kates, Carol A. “Reproductive Liberty and Overpopulation.” Environmental Values 13 (2004): 51–79.
Katz, Eric. “The Liberation of Humanity and Nature.” Environmental Values 11 (2002).
Keaney, Michael. “The State of Environmental Security.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003):
124–32.
Kellow, Aynsley. “Norms, Interests, and Environment NGOs: The Limits of Cosmopolitanism.”
Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Kipfer, Stefan. “Urbanization, Everyday Life and the Survival of Capitalism: Lefebvre, Gramsci and
the Problematic of Hegemony.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 13 (2002): 117–49.
Kirk, Amanda. “International Institutions and National Policies.” Global Environmental Politics 8
(2008): 148–50.
Kirkman, Robert. “Darwinian Humanism and the End of Nature.” Environmental Values 18 (2009):
217–36.
———. “Darwinian Humanism: A Proposal for Environmental Philosophy.” Environmental Values
16 (2007): 3–21.
Klintman, Mikael, and Magnus Bostrom. “Framings of Science and Ideology: Organic Food Labeling
in the US and Sweden.” Environmental Politics 13 (2004): 612–34.
Knights, Paul. “Native Species, Human Communities, and Cultural Relationships.” Environmental
Values 17 (2008): 353–73.
Konak, Nahide. “Ecological Modernization and Eco-Marxist Perspectives: Globalization and Gold
Mining Development in Turkey.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 19 (2008): 107–30.
Kovel, Joel. “Alain Lipietz and the Crisis of Political Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11
(2000): 67–71.
———. “A Materialism Worthy of Nature.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 73–84.
———. “Ecological Marxism and Dialectic.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1996): 31–50.
———. “Ecosocialism, Global Justice, and Climate Change.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 19
(2008): 4–14.
———. “The Dialectic of Radical Ecologies.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 75–87.
———. “The Ecofeminist Ground of Ecosocialism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 1–8.
Krajnc, Anita. “’Can Do’ and ’Can’t Do’ Responses to Climate Change.” Global Environmental
Politics 3 (2003): 98–108.
Kuennen, Craig R. “The Theory of Coadaptation: Toward a Non-Domineering Model of Technology.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 41–63.
Kumbamu, Ashok. “Ecological Modernization and the ’Gene Revolution’: The Case Study of Bt
Cotton in India.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 17 (2006): 7–31.
Kuper, Richard. “European Agriculture in the Crucible of the WTO.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18
(2007): 68–80.
Kutting, Gabriela. “Environmental Justice.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 115–21.
———. Globalization and the Environment: Greening Global Political Economy. SUNY Press, 2004.
Kuwimb, M. “A Critical Study of the Resource Curse Thesis and the Experience of Papua New
Guinea,” 2010.
Kvakkestad, Valborg, Froydis Gillund, Kamila Anette Kjolberg, and Arild Fatn. “Scientists’
Perspectives on the Deliberate Release of GM Crops.” Environmental Values 16 (2007): 79–104.
Lacy, Mark J. “Deconstructing Risk Society.” Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
Lafferty, William M. “The Politics of Sustainable Development: Global Norms for National
Implementation.” Environmental Politics 5 (1996).
Lafferty, William M., and Eivind Hovden. “Environmental Policy Integration: Towards an Analytical
Framework.” Environmental Politics 12 (2003).
Lane, Melissa S. Eco-Republic: What the Ancients Can Teach Us about Ethics, Virtue, and
Sustainable Living. Princeton University Press, 2012.
Langford, Ian H., Ian J. Bateman, R. Kerry Turner, Neil Powe, and Roy Brouwer. “Public Attitudes to
Contingent Valuation and Public Consultation.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Langhelle, Oluf. “Sustainable Development and Social Justice.” Environmental Values 9 (2000).
Latour, Bruno. Politics of Nature: How to Bring the Sciences into Democracy. Boston, MA: Harvard
University Press, 2004.
Latta, P. Alex. “Environmental Citizenship.” Global Environmental Politics 7 (2007): 136–38.
———. “Locating Democratic Politics in Ecological Citizenship.” Environmental Politics 16 (2007):
377–93.
Layzer, Judith A. “Science, Politics, and International Environmental Policy.” Global Environmental
Politics 2 (2002).
Layzer, Judith Z. The Environmental Case: Translating Values into Policy. 2nd ed. Oxford: CQ Press,
2005.
Lee, Wendy Lynn. “Environmental Pragmatism Revisited: Human-Centeredness, Language, and the
Future of Aesthetic Experience.” Environmental Philosophy 5 (2008).
Leff, Enrique. “Marxism and the Environmental Question: From the Critical Theory of Production to
an Environmental Rationality for Sustainable Development.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 4
(1993): 44–66.
———. “The Scientific-Technological Revolution, the Forces of Nature, and Marx’s Theory of
Value.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000): 109–29.
Levidow, Les. “The GM Crops Debate: Utilitarian Bioethics.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12
(2001): 44–55.
Levine, Michael P. “Pantheism, Ethics, and Ecology.” Environmental Values 3 (1994).
Levins, Richard, and Richard C. Lewontin. “Holism and Reductionism in Ecology.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 33–40.
Lewontin, Richard, and Richard Levins. “How Different Are Natural and Social Science?” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 9 (1998): 85–89.
———. “Organism and Environment.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 95–98.
———. “The Biological and the Social.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 89–92.
———. “The End of Natural History?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 95–98.
Liberman, Sarah, and Tim Gray. “The So-Called ’Moratorium’ on the Licensing of New Genetically
Modified (GM) Products by the European Union 1998-2004: A Study in Ambiguity.”
Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 592–609.
———. “The World Trade Organization’s Report on the EU’s Moratorium on Biotech Prodcuts: The
Wisdom of the US Challenge to the EU in the WTO.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008):
33–52.
Librova, Hana. “The Disparate Roots of Voluntary Modesty.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Light, Andrew. “Rereading Bookchin and Marcuse as Environmental Materialists.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 4 (1993): 69–98.
———. Social Ecology after Bookchin. New York: Guilford Press, 1998.
———. “The Urban Blind Spot in Environmental Ethics.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. “What Is an Ecological Identity.” Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Light, Andrew, and Avner de-Shalit. Moral and Political Reasoning in Environmental Practice.
Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2003.
Light, Andrew, Eric Katz, and David Rothenberg. Beneath the Surface: Critical Essays in the
Philosophy of Deep Ecology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000.
Light, Andrew, and S. E. Hrudey. “Toward an Ideal World of Environmental Risk Management: Final
Report,” 1996.
Light, Andrew, John O’Neill, and Alan Holland. Environment and Values. London: Routledge Press,
2006.
Light, Andrew, and Eric Katz. Environmental Pragmatism. London; New York: Routledge, 1996.
Light, Andrew, and Jonathan M. Smith. Space, Place and Environmental Ethics. Lanham, MD:
Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 1997.
———. The Production of Public Space. Philosophy and Geography II. Lanham: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, 1998.
Linklater, A. “13 The Achievements of Critical Theory.” International Theory: Positivism and
beyond, 1996.
Lipietz, Alain. “From Marx to Ecology and Return? A Brief Reply.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11
(2000): 102–9.
———. “From Marx to Ecology and Return? A Brief Reply.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000):
102–9.
———. “Political Ecology and the Future of Marxism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000):
69–85.
Lipschutz, Ronnie D. “Environmental History, Political Economy, and Change: Frameworks and
Tools for Research and Analysis.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 72–91.
———. “Imitations of Empire.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 20–23.
———. “Ohmage to Resistance.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 18–22.
Litfin, Karen T. The Greening of Sovereignty in World Politics. Global Environmental Accord:
Strategies for Sustainability and Institutional Innovation. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1998.
Littlewood, David. “Biotechnology and the Integrity of LIfe: Taking Public Fears Seriously.”
Environmental Values 17 (2008): 543–46.
Lockwood, Michael. “Humans Valuing Nature.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Lohan, Dagmar. “The Global Environment: Institutions, Law, and Policy.” Global Environmental
Politics 6 (2006): 120–21.
Lomborg, Bjorn. The Skeptical Environmentalist: Measuring the Real State of the World. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2001.
Lowy, Michael. “From Marx to Ecosocialism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 13 (2002): 121–33.
———. “What Is Ecosocialism?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 15–24.
Lo, Y. S. “Non-Humean Holism, Un-Humean Holism.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
Lucas, Julie Cook. “Nature Ethics: An Ecofeminist Perspective.” Environmental Values 18 (2009):
247–49.
Lucas, Peter. “An Ontology of Trash: The Disposible and Its Problematic Nature.” Environmental
Values 17 (2008): 550–52.
Luke, Timothy W. Capitalism, Democracy, and Ecology: Departing from Marx. Champaign, IL:
University of Illinois Press, 1999.
———. Ecocritique: Contesting the Politics of Nature, Economy, and Culture. Minneapolis, MN:
University of Minnesota Press, 1997.
———. “Hashing It Over - Luke - Fast Capitalism 10.1.” Accessed September 18, 2014.
http://www.uta.edu/huma/agger/fastcapitalism/10_1/luke10_1.html.
———. “International or Interenvironmental Relations: Reassessing Nations and Niches in Global
Ecosystems.” Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 28 (2003).
———. “Liberal Society and Cyborg Subjectivity: The Politics of Environments, Bodies, and
Nature.” Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 21 (1996): 1–30.
———. “Nature Protection or Nature Projection: A Cultural Critique of the Sierra Club.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 37–63.
———. “Reconstructing Nature: How the New Informatics Are Rewrighting the Environment and
Society as Bitspace.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 3–27.
———. “The Nature Conservancy or the Nature Cemetery: Buying and Selling ‘perpetual Care’; as
Environmental Resistance.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 1–20.
———. “The Pleasures of Use: Federalizing Wilds, Nationalizing Life at the National Wildlife
Federation.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 3–38.
———. “The Practices of Adaptive and Collaborative Environmental Management: A Critique.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 13 (2002): 1–22.
———. “The System of Sustainable Degradationo.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 17 (2006): 99–112.
———. “The (un) Wise (ab) Use of Nature: Environmentalism as Globalized Consumerism.”
Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 23 (1998).
———. “The Wilderness Society: Environmentalism as Environationalism.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 10 (1999): 1–35.
———. “The World Wildlife Fund: Ecocolonialism as Funding the Worldwide ‘wise Use’; of
Nature.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 31–61.
Lundqvist, Lennart J. “A Green Fist in a Velvet Glove: The Ecological State and Sustainable
Development.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
———. “A Green Fist in a Velvet Glove: The Ecological State and Sustainable Development.”
Environmental Values 10 (2001).
Luper-Foy, Steven. “Justice and Natural Resources.” Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Luper, Steven. “Natural Resources, Gadgets, and Artificial Life.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Luque, Emilio. “Researching Environmental Citizenship and Its Publics.” Environmental Politics 14
(2005): 211–25.
Luzon, Manuel Sacristan. “Political Ecological Considerations in Marx.” Capitalism Nature Socialism
3 (1992): 37–48.
Lynch, Tony. “Deep Ecology as an Aesthetic Movement.” Environmental Values 5 (1996).
Macaulay, David. Minding Nature: The Philosophers of Ecology. London: The Guilford Press, 1996.
Macauley, David. “Out of Place and Outer Space: Hannah Arendt on Earth Alienation: An Historical
and Critical Perspective.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 3 (1992): 19–45.
Maccarone, Ellen M. “The Ethics of Advocacy: Scientists and Environmental Policy.” Environmental
Philosophy 2 (2005).
MacGregor, Sherilyn. Beyond Mothering Earth: Ecological Citizenship and the Politics of Care. UBC
Press, 2011.
Macmillan, Tom. “The rBST Ban–a Taste of What’s to Come for GM Foods?” Environmental Politics
10 (2001).
Mallory, Chaone. “Ecofeminism and Forest Defense in Cascadia: Gender, Theory, and Radical
Activism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 17 (2006): 32–49.
Malnes, Raino. “Climate Science and the Way We Ought to Think About Danger.” Environmental
Politics 17 (August 2008): 660–72.
———. “Imperfect Science.” Global Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 58–71.
Maltais, Aaron. “Global Warming and the Cosmopolitan Political Conception of Justice.”
Environmental Politics 17 (August 2008): 592–609.
Maly, Kenneth. “Why Environmental Studies Needs Philosophy.” Environmental Philosophy 1
(2004).
Maniates, Michael F. “Individualization: Plant a Tree, Buy a Bike, Save the World?” Global
Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 31–52.
Manno, Jack. “Political Ideology and Conflicting Environmental Paradigms.” Global Environmental
Politics 4 (2004): 155–59.
Marcuse, Herbert. “Ecology and the Critique of Modern Society.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 3
(1992): 29–38.
Marinetto, Michael. “The Shareholders Strike Back: Issues in the Research of Shareholder Activism.”
Environmental Politics 7 (1998).
Marshall, Brent K. “Globalisation, Environmental Degradation, and Urlich Beck’s Risk Society.”
Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Martello, Marybeth Long. “A Paradox of Virtue? ’Other’ Knowledges and Environment-Development
Politics.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 114–41.
Martin, Bruce. “The Meeting of Spirit and Nature in Human Experience.” Environmental Philosophy
1 (2004).
Martinez-Alier, J. “Ecological Economics and Eco-Socialism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 1 (1990):
109–22.
Martinez-Alier, Joan. “Environmental Justice (Local and Global).” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8
(1997): 1.
———. “The Merchandising of Biodiversity.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 37–54.
Martin, George, and Saskia Vermeylen. “Intellectual Property, Indigenous Knowledge, and
Biodiversity.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 27–48.
Mason, Michael. “The Governance of Transnational Environmental Harm: Addresing New Modes of
Accountability/Responsibility.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 8–24.
———. “The Life and Death of Environmental Subjects.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 115–20.
———. “Transparency for Whom? Information Disclosure and Power in Global Environmental
Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 8–13.
Masters, Roger D. The First and Second Discourses by Jean-Jacques Rousseau. New York: Bedford /
St. Martin’s, 1969.
Matthews, Patricia M. “Aesthetics of the Natural Environment.” Environmental Values 13 (2004):
401–3.
Mayumi, Kozo. “Farming versus Manufacturing.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 115–20.
Mazis, Glen. “The World of Wolves: Lessons about the Sacredness of the Surround, Belonging, the
Silent Dialogue of Interdependence and Death, and Speciocide.” Environmental Philosophy 5
(2008).
MCbeath, Jerry. “Environmental Politics in Industrialized Nations.” Global Environmental Politics 4
(2004): 142–47.
McCarthy, James. “Commons as Counterhegemonic Projects.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16
(2005): 9–24.
McCormick, Rachel. “A Qualitative Analysis of the WTO’s Role on Trade and Environment Issues.”
Global Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 102–24.
McCoy, Earl D., and K. S. Shrader-Frechette. “How the Tail Wags the Dog: How Value Judgments
Determine Ecological Science.” Environmental Values 3 (1994).
McGinnis, Michael Vincent. “Restoring Community and Place in a Global Economy.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 11 (2000): 93–103.
McIntosh, Alistair. “The Emperor Has No Clothes...Let Us Paint Our Loincloths Rainbow: A
Classical and Feminist Critique of Contemporary Science Policy.” Environmental Values 5
(1996).
McLaughlin, Andrew. “What Is Deep Ecology?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 25–30.
Mellor, Mary. “The Politics of Money and Credit as a Route to Ecological Sustainability and
Economic Democracy.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 45–60.
Merchant, Carolyn. Ecology. 4th ed. Key Concepts in Critical Theory. New York: Prometheus Books,
2004.
———. Radical Ecology: The Search for a Livable World. 2nd ed. Revolutionary Thought / Radical
Movements. London: Routledge, 2005.
———. Reinventing Eden: The Fate of Nature in Western Culture. 1st ed. London: Routledge, 2004.
———. The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology, and the Scientific Revolution. Reprint. San Francisco:
Harper, 1990.
Merricks, Linda. “Frederick Soddy: Scientist, Economist and Environmentalist — an Examination of
His Politics.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 59–78.
Meyer, John M. “Interpreting Nature and Politics in the History of Western Thought: The
Environmentalist Challenge.” Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
———. Political Nature: Environmentalism and the Interpretation of Western Thought. MIT Press,
2001.
———. “The Concept of Private Property and the Limits of the Environmental Imagination.”
Political Theory 37 (2009): 99–127.
Michael, Mark A. “What’s in a Name? Pragmatism, Essentialism, and Environmental Ethics.”
Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Milanez, Bruno, and Ton Buhrs. “Marrying Strands of Ecological Modernisation: A Proposed
Framework.” Environmental Politics 16 (2007): 565–83.
Milbrath, Lester M. “Redefining the Good Life in a Sustainable Society.” Environmental Values 2
(1993).
Milleer, Char. Gifford Pinchot and the Making of Modern Environmentalism. 1st ed. Pioneers of
Conservation. Washington, D.C: Island Press, 2001.
Milton, Kay. “Nature Is Already Sacred.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Minteer, Ben A. “Environmental Philosophy and the Public Interest: A Pragmatic Reconciliation.”
Environmental Values 14 (2005): 37–60.
———. “No Experience Necessary? Foundationalism and the Retreat from Culture in Environmental
Ethics.” Environmental Values 7 (1998).
———. The Landscape of Reform: Civic Pragmatism and Environmental Thought in America.
Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2006.
Mol, Arthur P. J. “Ecological Modernization and the Global Economy.” Global Environmental
Politics 2 (2002): 92–115.
Mol, Arthur P. J., and David A. Sonnenfeld. “Ecological Modernisation Around the World: An
Introduction.” Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Mol, Arthur P. J., and Gert Spaargaren. “Ecological Modernisation Theory in Debate: A Review.”
Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Moore, Jason W. “Marx’s Ecology and the Environmental History of World Capitalism.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 134–47.
Morito, Bruce. “Intrinsic Value: A Modern Albatross for the Ecological Approach.” Environmental
Values 12 (2003).
Morris, Carol, and Amanda Wragg. “Talking about the Birds and the Bees: Biodiversity Claims
Making at the Local Level.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Mueller, Charles C. “Economics, Entropy, and the Long Term Future: Conceptual Foundations and
the Perspective of the Economics of Survival.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
Mukta, Parita, and David Hardiman. “The Political Ecology of Nostalgia.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 11 (2000): 113–33.
Mulberg, John. “Environment and Sociology: The State of the Debate.” Global Environmental
Politics 3 (2003).
Muller, Frank G. “Does the Convention on Biodiversity Safeguard Biological Diversity?”
Environmental Values 9 (2000).
Muller-Rommel, Ferdinand, and Holger Meyer. “Social Sciences and Environmental Sciences: A
State of the Art Review.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Mulligan, Shane P. “For Whose Benefits? Limits to Sharing in the Bioprospecting ’Regime’.”
Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Munoz-Rubio, Julio. “Population, Environmental Crisis, and Science: A Critique of an Ecological
Paradigm.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 9 (1998): 123–34.
Murphy, Patrick D. “Rethinking the Relations of Nature, Culture, and Agency.” Environmental Values
1 (1992).
Mushita, Andrew T., and Carol B. Thompson. “Patenting Biodiversity? Rejecting WTO/TRIPS in
Southern Africa.” Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 65–82.
Najam, Adil. “Global Voices from the South.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 148–54.
Najam, Adil, Loli Christopoulou, and William R. Moomaw. “The Emergent ’System’ of Global
Environmental Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 23–35.
Nelson, Eric Sean. “Responding to Heaven and Earth: Daoism, Heidegger, and Ecology.”
Environmental Philosophy 1 (2004).
Nerlich, Brigitte, and Nick Wright. “Biosecurity and Insecurity: The Interaction Between Policy and
Ritual During the Foot and Mouth Crisis.” Environmental Values 15 (2006): 441–62.
Neumayer, Eric. “How Regime Theory and the Economic Theory of International Environmental
Cooperation Can Learn from Each Other.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 122–47.
———. “The WTO and the Environment: Its Past Record Is Better than Critics Believe but the Future
Outlook Is Bleak.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 1–8.
Newell, Peter. “Civil Society, Corporate Accountability, and the Politics of Climate Change.” Global
Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 122–53.
———. “Environmental Justice Movements: Taking Stock, Moving Foward.” Environmental Politics
15 (2006): 656–60.
———. “Globalization and the Governance of Biotechnology.” Global Environmental Politics 3
(2003).
———. “New Environmental Architectures and the Search for Effectiveness.” Global Environmental
Politics 1 (2001): 35–44.
———. “Race, Class, and the Global Politics of Environmental Inequality.” Global Environmental
Politics 5 (2005): 70–94.
Newig, Jens. “Symbolic Environmental Legislation and Societal Self-Deception.” Environmental
Politics 16 (2007): 276–96.
Niemeyer, Simon. “Deliberation in the Wilderness: Displacing Symbolic Politics.” Environmental
Politics 13 (2004): 347–72.
Nixon, Rob. Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor. Harvard University Press, 2011.
Norman, Vig, and Michael E. Kraft. Environmental Policy: New Directions for the Twenty-First
Century. 6th ed. Oxford: Congressional Quarterly Press, 2005.
Norton, Bryan. “Sustainability, Human Welfare, and Ecosystem Health.” Environmental Values 1
(1992).
O’Brien, Kevin J. “Environment, Economics, and Hegemony.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 17
(2006): 111–16.
O’Connor, James. “A Prolegomenon to an Ecological Marxism: Thoughts on the Materialist
Conception of History.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 10 (1999): 77–106.
———. “Capitalism, Nature, Socialism a Theoretical Introduction.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 1
(1990): 11–38.
———. “Democracy and Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 4 (1993): 113–16.
———. “On Social Needs.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 56–58.
———. “Political Economy of Ecology of Socialism and Capitalism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 1
(1990): 93–107.
———. “Socialism and Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 2 (1991): 1–12.
———. “Socialist Biocentrism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 2 (1991): 93–94.
———. “Think Globally, Act Locally? Towards an International Red Green Movement.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 3 (1992): 1–8.
———. “What Is Environmental History? Why Environmental History?” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 8 (1997): 3–29.
O’Connor, Martin. Entropic Irreversibility, Involuntary Exchange, Global Instability and
Uncontrolled Economy-Environment Coevolution. Auckland, N.Z.: University of Auckland,
1991.
———. Is Capitalism Sustainable: Political Economy and the Politics of Ecology. London: The
Guilford Press, 1994.
———. “Natural Capital,” 2000.
———. “Social Processes of Environmental Valuation: Valse Project,” 2000.
O’Connor, Martin, and Clive L. Splash. Valuation and the Environment: Theory, Method, and
Practice. Advances in Ecological Economics. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing, 1999.
Odenbaugh, Jay. “Values, Advocacy, and Conservation Biology.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Ogle, Greg. “Accounting for Economic Welfare: Politics, Problems, and Potentials.” Environmental
Politics 9 (2000).
Okereke, Chukwumerije. “Equity Norms in Global Environmental Governance.” Global
Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 25–50.
O’Neill, John. “Happiness and the Good Life.” Environmental Values 17 (2008): 125–44.
Ophuls, William. Ecology and the Politics of Scarcity: Prologue to a Political Theory of the Steady
State. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman & Company, 1977.
O’Riordan, Timothy, and Andrew Jordan. “The Precautionary Principle in Contemporary
Environmental Politics.” Environmental Values 4 (1995).
O’Riordan, Tim, and Heather Voisey. “The Political Economy of Sustainable Development.”
Environmental Politics 6 (1997).
O’Sullivan, Siobhan. “Advocating for Animals Equality From Within a Liberal Paradigm.”
Environmental Politics 16 (February 2007): 1–14.
Ozler, S. Ilgu, and Brian K. Obach. “Capitalism, State Economic Policy, and Ecological Footprint: An
International Comparative Analysis.” Global Environmental Politics 9 (2009): 79–108.
Paarlberg, Robert L. “Agricultural Governance: Globalization and the New Politics of Regulation.”
Global Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 122–23.
Paavola, Jouni. “Science and Social Justice in the Governance of Adaptation to Climate Change.”
Environmental Politics 17 (August 2008): 644–59.
Pachirat, Timothy. Every Twelve Seconds: Industrialized Slaughter and the Politics of Sight. Yale
University Press, 2011.
Paehlke, Robert. Bucolic Myths: Towards a More Urbanist Environmentalism. Toronto: Centre for
Urban and Community Studies, University of Toronto, 1986.
———. Conservation and Environmentalism: An Encyclopedia. New York: Garland Publishing,
1995.
———. Democracy’s Dilemma. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
———. Ecological Carrying Capacity Effects of Building Materials Extraction. Vancouver, BC:
Forintek Canada Corp, 1992.
———. Environmentalism and the Future of Progressive Politics. New Haven: Yale University Press,
1989.
———. “Environmental Politics, Sustainability, and Science.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. “Environment, Equity, and Globalization: Beyond Resistence.” Global Environmental
Politics 1 (2001): 1–10.
Paehlke, Robert, and Douglas Torgerson. Managing Leviathan: Environmental Politics and the
Administrative State. 2nd ed. Peterborough, Ont., Canada; Lewiston, NY: Broadview Press,
1990.
Page, Edward A. “Distributing the Burdens of Climate Change.” Environmental Politics 17 (August
2008): 556–75.
———. “Intergenerational Justice of What: Welfare, Resources, or Capabilities?” Environmental
Politics 16 (2007): 453–69.
Panayotakis, Costas. “Capitalism’s ‘Dialectic of Scarcity’ and the Emancipatory Project.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 88–107.
———. “Nature, Dialectics and Emancipatory Politics.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001):
63–73.
Panitch, Leo, and Colin Leys. Coming to Terms with Nature. Socialist Register 2007. New York:
Monthly Review Press, 2006.
———. Coming to Terms with Nature: Socialist Register 2007. New York: Monthly Review Press,
2007.
Pardoe, Simon. “Foot and Mouth: Policy and Practice.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
Parfitt, Trevor. “Are the Third World Poor Homines Sacri? Biopolitics, Sovereignty, and
Development.” Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 34 (2009): 41–58.
Partridge, Ernest. “The Future–For Better or Worse.” Environmental Values 11 (2002).
Pasek, Joanna, and Wilfred Beckerman. “Plural Values and Environmental Valuation.” Environmental
Values 6 (1997).
Paterson, Matthew. “Climate Change Politics: Ongoing Controversies, Maturing Analyses.”
Environmental Politics 13 (2004): 482–88.
———. “Political Economies of Sustainability.” Environmental Politics 16 (February 2007): 147–53.
———. “Understanding the Green Backlash.” Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Patterson, Matthew, David Humpherys, and Lloyd Pettiford. “Conceptualizing Global Environmental
Governance: From Interstate Regimes to Counter-Hegemonic Struggles.” Global Environmental
Politics 3 (2003).
Pearce, David. “Green Economics.” Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Pellizzoni, Liugi. “Responsibility and Economic Governance.” Environmental Politics 13 (2004):
541–65.
Pellizzoni, Luigi. “Uncertaintly and Participatory Democracy.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Pellizzoni, Luigi, and Marja Ylonen. “Responsibility in Uncertain Times: An Institutional Perspective
on Percaution.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 51–73.
Pepper, David. “Misrepresenting Deep Ecology and the Left.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995):
39–41.
———. “Utopianism and Environmentalism.” Environmental Politics 14 (2005): 3–22.
Pepperman, Bob. Our Limits Transgressed: Environmental Political Thought in America. Reissue.
Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 1992.
Perelman, Michael. “Marx and Resource Scarcity.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 4 (1993): 65–84.
———. “Scarcity and Environmental Disaster: Why Hotelling’s Price Theory Doesn’t Apply.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 81–98.
Peretti, Jonah H. “Nativism and Nature: Rethinking Biological Invasion.” Environmental Values 7
(1998).
Petermann, Anne, and Brian Tokar. “GE Trees, Cellulosic Ethanol, and the Destruction of Forest
Biological Diversity.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 19 (2008): 48–64.
Peterson, Tarla Rai, and Markus J. Peterson. “A Rhetorical Critique of ’Nonmarket’ Valuations.”
Environmental Values 2 (1992).
———. “Ecology: Scientific, Deep, and Feminist.” Environmental Values 5 (1996).
Petzold-Bradley, Eileen, Alexander Carius, and Arpad Vincze. Responding to Environmental
Conflicts: Implications for Theory and Practice. 1st ed. NATO Science Partnership Sub-Series:
2. New York: Springer, 2001.
Pezzey, John. “Sustainability: An Interdisciplinary Guide.” Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Philip, Kavita. “Nature, Culture Capital, Empire.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 5–12.
———. “Seeds of Neo-Colonialism? Reflections on Ecological Politics in the New World Order.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 3–47.
Plumwood, Val. “Nature as Agency and the Prospects for a Progressive Naturalism.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 3–32.
———. “Tasteless: Towards a Food-Based Approach to Death.” Environmental Values 17 (2008):
323–30.
Prakash, Aseem. “Environmental Protection and the Social Resonsibilty of Firms/Corporate America
and Environmental Policy: How Often Does Business Get Its Way?/Nature’s Revenge:
Reclaiming Sustainability in an Age of Corporate Globalization.” Global Environmental Politics
7 (2007): 130–35.
Preston, Christopher J. “Intrinsic Value and Care: Making Connections Through Ecological
Narratives.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
———. “Synthetic Biology: Drawing a Line in Darwin’s Sand.” Environmental Values 17 (2008):
23–39.
Princen, Thomas. “Consumption and Externalities: Where Economy Meets Ecology.” Global
Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 11–30.
———. “Principles for Sustainability: From Cooperation and Efficiency to Sufficiency.” Global
Environmental Politics 3 (2003).
———. The Logic of Sufficiency. Vol. 30. MIT Press Cambridge, MA, 2005.
Rajan, S. Ravi. “Disaster, Development, and Governance: Reflections on the ’Lessons’ of Bhopal.”
Environmental Values 11 (2002).
Redclift, Michael. “Environmental Security and the Recombinant Human: Sustainability in the
Twenty-First Century.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
———. “Sustainable Development: Needs, Values, Rights.” Environmental Values 2 (1993).
Reed, Matt. “Globalised Food.” Environmental Politics 12 (2004): 489–93.
Reid, Herbert G. “Engaging the Transnational Corporate State: A Role for Environmental
Nationalism?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 103–8.
Reitan, Marit. “Ecological Modernisation and ’Realpolitik’: Ideas, Interests, and Institutions.”
Environmental Politics 7 (1998).
Renfrew, Daniel. “ We Are All Contaminated”: Lead Poisoning and Urban Environmental Politics in
Uruguay. ProQuest, 2007.
Reuveny, Rafael. “Economic Growth, Environmental Scarcity, and Conflict.” Global Environmental
Politics 2 (2002): 83–110.
Rigby, Dan, and Sophie Bown. “Whatever Happened to Organic? Food, Nature and the Market for
‘Sustainable’ Food.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 81–102.
Roberts, Geoffrey K. “Modes of Environmental Activism.” Environmental Politics 16 (2007):
677–82.
Robinson, W.I., A. Bendaña, and R.A. Pastor. A Faustian Bargain: US Intervention in the Nicaraguan
Elections and American Foreign Policy in the Post-Cold War Era. Westview press Boulder, CO,
1992.
Roe, Emergy, and Michael J. G. Van Eeten. “Three–Not Two–Major Environmental Counternarratives
to Globalization.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 36–53.
Rogin, Michael. “Nature as Politics and Nature as Romance in AmericaNature as Politics and Nature
as Romance in America.” Political Theory 5 (1977): 5–30.
Rolston, Holmes. Environmental Ethics: Duties to and Values in the Natural World. Ethics and Action
Series. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1988.
———. Philosophy Gone Wild: Essays in Environmental Ethics. Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books,
1986.
Rolston, Holmes, and Andrew Light. Environmental Ethics: An Anthology. Blackwell Philosophy
Anthologies. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2003.
Roodman, David M. The Natural Wealth of Nations: Harnessing the Market for the Environment. 1st
ed. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1998.
Rootes, Christopher. “Acting Globally, Thinking Locally? Prospects for a Global Environmental
Movement.” Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
———. “Acting Locally: The Character, Contexts, and Significance of Local Environmental
Mobalisations.” Environmental Politics 16 (2007): 722–41.
———. “Environmental Movements: From the Local to the Global.” Environmental Politics 8
(1999).
———. “Globalisation, Environmentalism, and the Global Justice Movement.” Environmental
Politics 14 (2005): 692–96.
Rosendal, G. Kristin. “Governing GMOs in the EU: A Deviant Case of Environmental PolicyMaking?” Global Environmental Politics 5 (2005): 82–104.
Rosewarne, Stuart. “Marxism, the Second Contradiction, and Socialist Ecology.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 8 (1997): 99–120.
———. “On Ecological Economics.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 105–15.
———. “Socialist Ecology’s Necessary Engagement with Ecofeminism.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 17 (2006): 78–86.
Rothenberg, David. “Individual or Community? Two Approaches to Ecophilosophy in Practice.”
Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Routledge, Paul, Corinne Nativel, and Andrew Cumbers. “Entangled Logics and Grassroots
Imaginaries of Global Justice Networks.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 839–56.
Rovics, David. “Pivotal Moment in the Green Scare.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 8–16.
Rowe, James K. “States of Nature, Environing the Political: A Response to Timothy W. Luke.”
Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 28 (2003): 637–55.
Rowlands, Ian H. “International Fairness and Justice in Addressing Global Climate Change.”
Environmental Politics 6 (1997).
Roy, Tania, and Craig Borowiak. “Against Ecofeminism: Agrarian Populism and the Splintered
Subject in Rural India.” Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 28 (2003).
Rudy, Alan. “Marx’s Ecology and Rift Analysis.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 56–63.
———. “Nature, Labor and Gender: Marx, Lipietz and Political Ecology.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 11 (2000): 83–90.
———. “On the Dialectics of Capital and Nature.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 95–106.
———. “On the Ecofeminist Editorial: ’Moving to an Embodied Materialism’.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 17 (2006): 105–14.
Rudy, Alan P., and Brian J. Gareau. “Actor-Network Theory, Marxist Economics, and Marxist
Political Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 16 (2005): 85–90.
Rutherford, Stephanie. Governing the Wild: Ecotours of Power. U of Minnesota Press, 2011.
Rydin, Yvonne. “Can We Talk Ourselves into Sustainability? The Role of Discourse in the
Environmental Policy Process.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Ryle, Martin. “‘The Pale Cast of Thought:’ Cultural Studies, Nature, and Cultures of Resistance.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 125–31.
Saarikoski, Heli. “Objectivity and the Environment - Epistemic Value of Biases.” Environmental
Politics 16 (2007): 488–98.
Sachs, Jeffrey. The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for Our Time. New York: Penguin Press,
2005.
Sagoff, Mark. “Four Dogmas of Environmental Economics.” Environmental Values 3 (1994).
———. The Economy of the Earth: Philosophy, Law, and the Environment. 2nd ed. Cambridge
Studies in Philosophy and Public Policy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
———. The Economy of the Earth: Philosophy, Law and the Environment. Reprint Ed. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2005.
Saiz, Angel Valencia. “Explorations in Environmental Political Theory, Thinking About What We
Value.” Revista Espanola de Ciencia Politica, April 2005, 167–71.
———. “Globalisation, Cosmopolitanism, and Ecological Citizenship.” Environmental Politics 14
(2005): 163–78.
Salleh, Ariel. “Ecofeminism as Sociology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 75–87.
———. “’Organized Responsibility’: Contradictions in the Australian Government’s Strategy for GM
Regulation.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 399–416.
———. “Social Ecology and ‘The Main Question.’” Environmental Politics 5 (1996).
Salleh, Ariel, and Martin O’Connor. “Eco-socialism/Eco-Feminism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 2
(1991): 129–37.
Sanbonmatsu, John. “Listen, Ecological Marxist! (yes, I Said Animals!).” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 16 (2005): 107–14.
Sandilands, Catriona. The Good-Natured Feminist: Ecofeminism and the Quest for Democracy. 1st
ed. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999.
Sandin, Per. “The Precautionary Principle and the Concept of Precaution.” Environmental Values 13
(2004): 461–75.
Sandler, Ronald. “Towards an Adequate Environment Virtue Ethic.” Environmental Values 13 (2004):
477–95.
Sand, Peter H. “Sovereignty Bounded: Public Trusteeship for Common Pool Resources?” Global
Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 47–71.
Sanwal, Jukul. “Trends in Global Environmental Governance: The Emergence of a Mutual
Supportiveness Approach to Achieve Sustainable Development.” Global Environmental Politics
4 (2004): 16–22.
Sargisson, Lucy. “Politicising the Quotidian.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. “What’s Wrong With Ecofeminism?” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Saurin, Julian. “Global Environmental Crisis as the ’Disaster Triumphant’: Private Capture of Public
Goods.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Scerri, Andy. Greening Citizenship: Sustainable Development, the State and Ideology. Palgrave
Macmillan, 2012.
Schaber, Peter, and Klaus Peter Rippe. “Democracy and Environmental Decision-Making.”
Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Scharper, Stephen B. “Liberation Theology’s Critique of the Developmentalist Worldview:
Implications for Religious Environmental Engagemen.” Environmental Philosophy 3 (2006).
Schlosberg, David. Defining Environmental Justice Theories, Movements, and Nature. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2007.
———. “Reconveiving Environmental Justice: Global Movements and Political Theories.”
Environmental Politics 13 (2004): 517–40.
Schlosberg, David, and Elizabeth Bomberg. “Perspectives on American Environmentalism.”
Environmental Politics 17 (May 2008): 200–218.
Schluter, Achim, Peter Phillimore, and Suzanne Moffatt. “Enough Is Enough: Emerging ’Self-Help’
Environmentalism in a Petrochemical Town.” Environmental Politics 13 (2004): 715–33.
Schutz, Joachim. “Sustainability, Systems, and Meaning.” Environmental Values 9 (2000).
Schwartz, Katrina Z. S. “Nature, Development, and National Identity: The Battle Over Sustainable
Forestry in Latvia.” Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Schwartzman, David. “Ecosocialism or Ecocatastrophe?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 20 (2009):
6–33.
Seager, Joni. Earth Follies: Coming to Feminist Terms with the Global Environmental Crisis. New
York: Routledge, 1992.
Searle, John R. “A Classification of Illocutionary Acts.” Language in Society 5, no. 01 (1976): 1–23.
Seijo, Francisco. “The Politics of Fire: Spanish Forest Policy and Ritual Resistance in Galicia, Spain.”
Environmental Politics 14 (2008): 380–402.
Seyang, Gill. “Cultivating Carrots and Community: Local Organic Food and Sustainable
Consumption.” Environmental Values 16 (2007): 105–23.
Seyfang, Gill. “Shopping for Sustainability: Can Sustainable Consumption Promote Ecological
Citizenship?” Environmental Politics 14 (2005): 290–306.
Shantz, Jeff. “Green Syndicalism: An Alternative Red-Green Vision.” Environmental Politics 11
(2002).
Sharp, Liz. “Local Policy for the Global Environment: In Search of a New Perspective.”
Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Sheasby, Walt. “Inverted World: Karl Marx on Estrangement of Nature and Society.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 8 (1997): 31–47.
Sheasby, Walter Contreras. “On Political Ecology and the Future of Marxism: A Comment on Alain
Lipietz.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11 (2000): 96–101.
Shiva, Vandana. “Soil Not Oil.” Alternatives Journal 35, no. 3 (2009): 19.
———. Staying Alive: Women, Ecology and Development. Zed Books, 1988.
———. Water Wars: Privatization, Pollution and Profit. India Research Press, 2002.
Shockley, Kenneth. “Environmental Policy with Integrity: A Lesson from the Discursive Dilemma.”
Environmental Values 18 (2009): 177–99.
———. “Environmental Policy with Integrity: A Lesson from the Discursive Dilemma.”
Environmental Values 18 (2009): 177–99.
Shue, Henry. Basic Rights: Subsistence, Affluence, and US Foreign Policy. Princeton University
Press, 1996.
Shull, Tad. Redefining Red and Green  : Ideology and Strategy in European Political Ecology. Suny
Series in International Environmental Policy and Theory. Albany: State University of New York
Press, 1999.
Shutkin, William A. The Land That Could Be: Environmentalism and Democracy in the Twenty-First
Century. Urban and Industrial Environments. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2001.
Skirbekk, Gunnar. “Marxism and Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 95–104.
Skjaerseth, Jon Birger, Olav Schram Stolkke, and Jorgen Wettestand. “Soft Law, Hard Law, and
Effective Implementation of International Environmental Norms.” Global Environmental Politics
6 (2006): 104–20.
Smith, Adrian. “Liberalisation and New Environmental Policy Instruments.” Environmental Politics 8
(1999).
Smith, Graham. Deliberative Democracy and the Environment. Psychology Press, 2003.
———. “Emerging Sustainable Practices.” Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
———. “Green Citizenship and the Social Economy.” Environmental Politics 14 (2005): 273–89.
———. “Radical Activism.” Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
———. “Takign Deliberation Seriously: Institutional Design and Green Politics.” Environmental
Politics 10 (2001).
Smith, Kimberly K. “Natural Subjects: Nature and Political Community.” Environmental Values 15
(August 2006): 343–53.
Smith, Mick. “Against Ecological Sovereignty: Agamben, Politics, and Globalisation.” Environmental
Politics 18 (June 2009): 99–116.
———. “Bioregional Visions.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. “Environmental Policy and Political Economy.” Environmental Politics 12 (2003).
———. “Lost for Words? Gadamer and Benjamin on the Nature of Language and the ’Language’ of
Nature.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
———. “Negotiating Nature? Social Theory at Its Limits?” Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
———. “Terra Nova: Nature and Culture.” Environmental Politics 7 (1998).
———. “The State of Nature: The Political Philosophy of Primitivism and the Culture of
Contamination.” Environmental Values 11 (2002).
———. “What’s Natural? The Socio-Political (de)Construction of Nature.” Environmental Politics 6
(1997).
Smith, Mick, and Alex Law. “The Reinvention of Politics: Ulrich Beck and Reflexive Modernity.”
Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Smith, Richard A. “The Eco-Suicidal Economics of Adam Smith.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18
(2007): 22–43.
Smith, Roy. “Place and Chips: Virtual Communities, Governance, and the Environment.” Global
Environmental Politics 3 (2003).
Sneeringer, Stacy. “A Question of Balance: Weighing the Options on Global Warming Policies.”
Global Environmental Politics 9 (1999): 146–47.
Sonnenfeld, David A. “The Violence of Abstraction: Globalization and the Politics of Place.” Global
Environmental Politics 6 (2006): 112–17.
Soper, Kate. “A Green Mythology?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 119–24.
———. “A Green Mythology?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 119–24.
———. “Eco-Feminism and Eco-Socialism: Dilemmas of Essentialism and Materialism.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 3 (1992): 11–114.
———. “Representing Nature.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 9 (1998): 61–65.
———. “The Goodness of Nature and the Nature of Goodness.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 11
(2000): 87–92.
———. “The Political Ecology of Water: An Introduction.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003):
91–98.
———. “The Politics of Nature: Reflections on Hedonism, Progress and Ecology.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 10 (1999): 47–70.
Sowers, Jeannie. “The Many Unjustices of Climate Change.” Global Environmental Politics 7 (2007):
140–46.
Spaargaren, Gert, and Bas Van Vilet. “Lifestyles, Consumption, and the Environment: The Ecological
Modernisation of Domestic Consumption.” Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
Spash, Clive L. “Human-Induced Climate Change: The Limits of Models.” Environmental Politics 5
(1996).
———. “The Development of Environmental Thinking in Economics.” Environmental Values 8
(1999).
Spence, Martin. “Environmental Crisis in Prehistory: Hunter-Gatherers and Mass Extinctions.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 105–18.
Sperber, Irwin. “Alienation in the Environmental Movement: Regressive Tendencies in the Struggle
for Environmental Justice.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 1–43.
Srinivas, K. Ravi. “Bt Cotton in India: Economic Factors versus Environmental Concerns.”
Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
———. “The Great Population Debate.” Environmental Politics 5 (1996).
Steinberg, Paul F. “Understanding Policy Change in Developing Countries: The Spheres of Influence
Framework.” Global Environmental Politics 3 (2003).
Stephens, Piers, Andrew Dobson, and John Barry. Contemporary Environmental Politics: From
Margins to Mainstream. Routledge Research in Environmental Politics. New York: Taylor and
Francis, 2006.
Stephens, Piers H. G. “A Space for Place: Pragmatic Naturalism, Particularity, and the Politics of
Nature.” Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
———. “Economical With the Proof: Blind Preferences and Visionary Ethics.” Environmental
Politics 7 (1998).
———. “Green Liberalisms: Nature, Agency, and the Good.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. “Hubris, Humility, History, and Harmony: Human Belonging and the Uses of Nature.”
Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
———. “Nature, Purity, and Ontology.” Environmental Values 9 (2000).
———. “The Green Only Blooms Amid the Millian Flowers: A Reply to Marcel Wissenburg.”
Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Stoett, Peter J. “Counter-Bioinvasion: Conceptual and Governance Challenges.” Environmental
Politics 16 (2007): 433–52.
Streck, Charlotte. “The Global Environment Facility–a Role Model for International Governance?”
Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 71–94.
Strohm, Laura A. “Pollution Havens and the Transfer of Environmental Risk.” Global Environmental
Politics 2 (2002): 29–36.
Stroshane, Tim. “Picking Our Poisons: Risk Ethics, Pesticides, and American Environmentalism.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 10 (1999): 115–52.
———. “What Do We Have in Commons?” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 85–91.
Summer, David, and Mark Huxham. “Emotion, Science, and Rationality.” Environmental Values 8
(1999).
Swaffield, Simon. “Sustainable Management and the Pastoral Ideal.” Environmental Politics 6 (1997).
Swyngedouw, Erik. “2 Metabolic Urbanization.” In the Nature of Cities: Urban Political Ecology and
the Politics of Urban Metabolism, 2006.
SYˇRIŠTOVÁ, EVA. “A Contribution to Phenomenology of the Human Normality in the Modern
Time.” Phenomenology and Existentialism in the Twenthieth Century 105 (2010).
Sydee, Jasmin, and Sharon Beder. “The Right Way to Go? Eart Sanctuaries and Market-Based
Conservation.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 17 (2006): 83–98.
Szerszynski, Bronislaw. “Risk and Trust.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
———. “The Post-Ecologist Condition: Irony as Symptom and Cure.” Environmental Politics 16
(2007): 337–55.
Takei, Milton. “Modernisation and Lost Horizons.” Environmental Politics 6 (1997).
Tamiotti, Ludivine, and Matthias Finger. “Environmental Organizations: Changing Roles and
Functions in Global Politics.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 56–76.
Tash, Sylvia N. Hidden Arguments: Political Ideology and Disease Prevention Policy. New
Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1988.
Tatman, Jeremy. “Reclaiming Work, Liberating Life.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Taylor, Paul W. Respect for Nature: A Theory of Environmental Ethics. Studies in Moral, Political,
and Legal Philosophy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1986.
Taylor, Raymond B. Ecological Resistance Movements: The Global Emergence of Radical and
Popular Environmentalism. Suny Series in International Environmental Policy and Theory.
Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1995.
Thiele, Leslie Paul. “Evolutionary Narratives and Ecological Ethics.” Political Theory 27 (1999):
6–38.
Thomas, Caroline. “Environmental and Health Research: Overlapping Agendas.” Global
Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 10–17.
Thomas, Urs P. “Trade and the Environment: Stuck in a Political Impasse at the WTO after the Doha
and Cancun Ministerial Conferences.” Global Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 9–21.
Thompson, J. “Towards a Green World Order: Environment and World Politics.” Environmental
Politics 4 (1995): 31–48.
Thoreau, Henry D. Walden and Resistance to Civil Government. 2nd ed. Norton Critical Editions.
New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1992.
Tickell, Crispin. “The Quality of Life: What Quality? Whose Life?” Environmental Values 1 (1992).
Toke, Dave. “Ecological Modernization and GM Food.” Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
———. “GM Crops: Science, Policy, and Environmentalists.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Toledo, Victor M. “Modernity and Ecology: The New Planetary Crisis.” Capitalism Nature Socialism
4 (1993): 31–48.
Torgerson, Douglas. “Expanding the Green Public Sphere: Post-Colonial Connections.”
Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 713–30.
———. “Farewell to the Green Movement? Political Action and the Green Public Sphere.”
Environmental Politics 9 (2000).
———. The Promise of Green Politics: Environmentalism and the Public Sphere. Durham, NC: Duke
University Press, 1999.
Trepl, Ludwig. “Holism and Reductionism in Ecology: Technical, Political, and Ideological
Implications.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 5 (1994): 13–31.
Trittin, Jurgen. “The Role of the Nation State in International Environmental Policy.” Global
Environmental Politics 4 (2004): 23–28.
Turner, Derek D. “Are We At War with Nature?” Environmental Values 14 (2005): 21–36.
Turner, Derek, and Lauren Hartzell. “The Lack of Clarity in the Precautionary Principle.”
Environmental Values 13 (2004): 449–60.
Turner, Terisa E., and Leigh Brownhill. “Ecofeminism as Gendered, Ethnicized Class Struggle: A
Rejoinder to Stuart Rosewarne.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 17 (2006): 87–95.
Tylecote, Andrew, and Jan Van dar Straaten. Environment, Technology and Economic Growth: The
Challenge to Sustainable Development. European Association for Evolutionary Political
Economy. Cheltenham, UK; Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 1997.
Tzankova, Zdravka. “The Science and Politics of Ecological Risk: Bioinvasions Policies in the US
and Australia.” Environmental Politics 18 (May 2009): 333–50.
Vaillancourt, Jean-Guy. “Environment and Society.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 13 (2002): 142–45.
Valdivielso, Joaquin. “Social Citizenship and the Environment.” Environmental Politics 14 (2005):
239–54.
Vanderheiden, Steve. Atmospheric Justice: A Political Theory of Climate Change. Oxford University
Press, 2008.
———. “Global Governance of Food Production and Consumption: Issues and Challenges.” Global
Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 161–63.
———. “Radical Environmentalism in an Age of Antiterrorism.” Environmental Politics 17 (May
2008): 299–318.
Van der Heijden, Hein-Anton. “Constructed Natures, Bureaucratic Landscapes.” Environmental
Politics 13 (2004): 775–80.
———. “Green Governmentality, Ecological Modernisation or Civic Environmentalism? Dealing
with Global Environmental Problems.” Environmental Politics 17 (November 2008): 835–39.
———. “Political Opportunity Structure and the Institutionalisation of the Environmental
Movement.” Environmental Politics 6 (1997).
———. “Recent Trends in Global Environmental Politics.” Environmental Politics 15 (2006):
490–95.
———. “Risk Management or Environmental Politics.” Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
Van der Straaten, Jan. “The Economic Value of Nature and the Environment.” Environmental Politics
8 (1999).
VanDeVeer, Donald, and Christine Pierce. The Environmental Ethics and Policy Book: Philosophy,
Ecology, Economics. 3rd ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing, 2002.
Van Dijk, T.A. “18 Critical Discourse Analysis.” The Handbook of Discourse Analysis 18 (2003).
Van Dijk, Teun A. “18 Critical Discourse Analysis.” The Handbook of Discourse Analysis, 2003.
Van Roozendaal, Gerda. “The Inclusion of Environmental Concerns in US Trade Agreements.”
Environmental Politics 18 (May 2009): 431–38.
Van Tatenhove, Jan P. M., and Pieter Leroy. “Environmental Participation in a Context of Political
Modernisation.” Environmental Values 12 (2003).
Vatn, Arild. “The Environment as a Commodity.” Environmental Values 9 (2000).
Victor, David G., and Lesley A. Coben. “A Herd Mentality in the Design of International
Environmental Agreements?” Global Environmental Politics 5 (2005): 24–57.
Vincent, Andrew. “Liberalism and the Environment.” Environmental Values 7 (1998).
Vogel, Steven. Against Nature: The Concept of Nature in Critical Theory. SUNY Series in Social and
Political Thought. New York: State University of New York Press, 1996.
Vogler, John. “Taking Institutions Seriously: How Regime Analysis Can Be Relevant to Multilevel
Environmental Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 3 (2003).
Vogler, John, and Mark Imber. The Environment and International Relations. London; New York:
Routledge, 1996.
Von Moltke, Konrad. “The Organization of the Impossible.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001):
23–28.
Wakenford, Tom, and Aubrey Meyer. “Valuing the Environment and Valuing Lives.” Environmental
Politics 5 (1996).
Wales, Corinne, and Gabe Mythen. “Risky Discourses: The Politics of GM Foods.” Environmental
Politics 11 (2002).
Wall, Derek. “Green Anti-Capitalism.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. “Realist Utopias? Green Alternatives to Capitalism.” Environmental Politics 16 (2007):
518–22.
———. “Social Credit: The Ecosocialism of Fools.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 14 (2003): 99–122.
Wallis, Victor. “Ecological Socialism and Human Needs.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 (1997):
47–51.
———. “Toward Ecological Socialism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 12 (2001): 127–45.
Walllis, Victor. “Technology, Ecology, and Socialist Renewal.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 15
(2004): 35–46.
Wapner, Paul. “Denaturalizing Ecological Politics: Alienation from Nature from Rousseau to the
Frankfurt School and Beyond.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 143–44.
———. “Horizontal Politics: Transnational Environmental Acticism and Global Cultural Change.”
Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 37–62.
———. “The Importance of Critical Environmental Studies in the New Environmentalism.” Global
Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 6–13.
Ward, Hugh. “Citizens’ Juries and Valuing the Environment: A Proposal.” Environmental Politics 8
(1999).
Ward, Neil. “The 1999 Reforms of the Common Agricultural Policy and the Environment.”
Environmental Politics 8 (1999).
Ward, Veronica. “International Environmental Regimes: Where Are We Now?” Global Environmental
Politics 2 (2002): 116–22.
Warner, Stanley. “Reproductive Liberty and Overpopulation: A Response.” Environmental Values 13
(2004): 393–409.
Weber, Martin. “Competing Political Visions: WTO Governance and Green Politics.” Global
Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 92–113.
———. “Competing Political Visions: WTO Governance and Green Politics.” Global Environmental
Politics 1 (2001): 92–113.
Welsh, Ian. “In Defence of Civilization: Terrorism and Environmental Politics in the 21st Century.”
Environmental Politics 16 (2007): 356–75.
———. “Science, Governance, and Environmental Politics.” Environmental Politics 11 (2002).
Westra, Laura. “Biotechnology and Transgenics in Agriculture and Aquaculture.” Environmental
Values 7 (1998).
———. “The Ethics of Environmental Holism and the Democratic State: Are They in Conflict?”
Environmental Values 2 (1993).
Wetlesen, Jon. “The Moral Status of Beings Who Are Not Persons.” Environmental Values 8 (1999).
Wetter, Erica. “On Radical Activism.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 143–47.
Whalley, John, and Ben Zissimos. “What Could a World Environmental Organization Do?” Global
Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 29–34.
Wheeler, David. “Beyond Pollution Havens.” Global Environmental Politics 2 (2002): 1–10.
White, Damian. “A Green Industrial Revolution? Sustainable Technological Innovation in a Global
Age.” 11 2 (2002).
———. “A Green Industrial Revolution? Sustainable Technological Innovation in a Global Age.” 11
2 (2002).
———. “Considering the Politics of Social Ecology.” Environmental Politics 7 (1998).
———. “The Unhappy Legacy of Thomas Malthus.” Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
Whiteside, Kerry. “Regulation, Ecology, Ethics: The Red-Green Politics of Alain Lipietz.” Capitalism
Nature Socialism 7 (1996): 31–55.
Whiteside, Kerry H. Divided Natures: French Contributions to Political Ecology. 1st ed. Cambridge,
MA: The MIT Press, 2002.
———. Precautionary Politics: Principle and Practice in Confronting Environmental Risk. MIT
Press Cambridge, MA, 2006.
Whitworth, Andrew. “Ethics and Reality in Environmental Discourses.” Environmental Politics 10
(2001).
Williams, Christopher. “Environmental Victims: Arguing the Costs.” Environmental Values 6 (1997).
Williams, Marc. “Trade and Environment in the World Trading System: A Decade of Stalemate?”
Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001): 1–9.
Williams, Raymond. “Socialism and Ecology.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 6 (1995): 41–57.
Wilson, Peter Lamborn. “The Disciples at Saïs: A Sacred Theory of Earth.” Capitalism Nature
Socialism 15 (2004): 17–30.
Wissenberg, Marcel. Green Liberalism. London: UCL Press, 1998.
Wissenburg, Marcel. “Dehierarchization and Sustainable Development in Liberal and Non-Liberal
Societies.” Global Environmental Politics 1 (2001).
———. “How to Be a Green Liberal: Nature, Value, and Liberal Philosophy.” Environmental Values
14 (2005): 140–42.
———. “Liberalism Is Always Greener on the Other Side of Mill: A Reply to Piers Stephen.”
Environmental Politics 10 (2001).
———. “The Rapid Reproducers Paradox: Population Control and Individual Procreative Rights.”
Environmental Politics 7 (1998).
Wissenburg, Marcel, and Yoram Levy. Liberal Democracy and Environmentalism: The End of
Environmentalism?. 1st ed. London: Routledge, 2004.
Wolf, Frieder Otto. “The Missed Rendezvous of Critical Marxism and Ecological Feminism.”
Capitalism Nature Socialism 18 (2007): 109–25.
Wong, Sam, and Liz Sharp. “Making Power Explicit In Sustainable Water Innovation: Re-Linking
Subjectivity, Institution, and Structure Through Environmental Citizenship.” Environmental
Politics 18 (June 2009): 37–57.
Woodgate, Graham, and Michael Redclift. “From a ’Sociology of Nature’ to Environmental
Sociology.” Environmental Values 7 (1998).
Woods, Kerri. “Deliberative Environmental Politics: Democracy and Ecological Rationality.” Global
Environmental Politics 7 (2007): 151–52.
———. “What Does the Language of Human Rights Bring to Campaigns for Environmental Justice?”
Environmental Politics 15 (2006): 572–91.
Wormald, Ben. “A Different Kind of Disaster Story.” Pew Research Center’s Journalism Project,
August 25, 2010. http://www.journalism.org/2010/08/25/oil-spill-was-very-differentkind-disaster-story/.
Xinyuan, Dai. “Effectiveness of International Environmental Institutions.” Global Environmental
Politics 8 (2008): 154–58.
Young, Alasdair R. “Picking the Wrong Fight: Why Attacks on the World Trade Organization Pose
the Real Threat to National Environmental and Public Health Protection.” Global Environmental
Politics 5 (2005): 47–72.
Young, Oran R. “The Architecture of Global Environmental Governance: Bringing Science to Bear on
Policy.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (2008): 14–32.
Young, Stephen. “Biodiversity, Participation, and Community: Reintegrating People and Nature.”
Environmental Politics 14 (2005): 697–702.
Young, Thomas. “The Morality of Ecosabotage.” Environmental Values 10 (2001).
Yu, Zhihao. Environmental Protection: A Theory of Direct and Indirect Competition for Political
Influence. Ottawa, Ontario: Carleton University Department of Economics, 2003.
Zerbe, Noah. “Contesting Privitization: NGOs and Farmers’ Rights in the African Model Law.”
Global Environmental Politics 7 (2007): 97–119.
Ziegler, Rafael. “Global Justice and Neoliberal Environmental Governance: Ethics, Sustainable
Development, and International Co-Operation.” Environmental Values 17 (2008): 425–27.
———. “The Politics of Operationalisation: Sustainable Development and the Eco-Space Approach.”
Environmental Politics 18 (April 2009): 163–81.
Zimmerman, Michael E. Contesting Earth’s Future: Radical Ecology and Postmodernity. Re-print.
Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1997.
Zwart, Ivan. “A Greener Alternative? Deliberative Democracy Meets Local Government.”
Environmental Politics 12 (2003).
Download