This chapter examines key questions related to uneven access to water in relation to green economy debates. In particular, what are our assumptions about resources and nature, and what would it mean to think about these concepts otherwise building on feminist, decolonizing, and other critical approaches and methodologies? How does the continuing orientation of feminist political ecology towards the global South inform and complicate such discussions and theorizations? The chapter looks at how green technologies play out unevenly in gendered and racialized terms, and how these shifts (dis)connect populations and places and hide key relationships and interconnections. Working through some of these conceptual issues, the paper suggests that cl...
Ecology and constructivism are motivated by broadly shared political aspirations and subscribe to si...
Political Ecology is firmly established as an important area of enquiry within Geography that attend...
Postcolonial feminism rests on the fact that Western feminism does not suffice for all the women of ...
This chapter examines key questions related to uneven access to water in relation to green economy d...
The current neo-liberal moment in water policy appears to offer possibilities for realizing feminist...
People understand their relationship, and that of broader society, with nature in a diverse range of...
In this paper, we map the gendered contours of contemporary water management in order to demonstrate...
This article provides a critical reading of some of the gendered dimensions of emergent water govern...
Contemporary market-based (i.e. neoliberal) 'green economy' approaches to environmental degradation ...
We welcome this opportunity to participate in this important dialogue between political ecology and ...
This book recognizes the centrality of gender as an organizing principle in the ways water is envis...
This chapter provides a brief overview of ecofeminist theory. It charts its rise due to the percepti...
Because water is pivotal for health and livelihoods, inadequate access to water may be a significant...
Considers Bolivian Andean indigenous forms of democracy and resistance to neoliberal water privatiza...
Feminist theory articulates a position that confronts dualisms and shows that entities previously se...
Ecology and constructivism are motivated by broadly shared political aspirations and subscribe to si...
Political Ecology is firmly established as an important area of enquiry within Geography that attend...
Postcolonial feminism rests on the fact that Western feminism does not suffice for all the women of ...
This chapter examines key questions related to uneven access to water in relation to green economy d...
The current neo-liberal moment in water policy appears to offer possibilities for realizing feminist...
People understand their relationship, and that of broader society, with nature in a diverse range of...
In this paper, we map the gendered contours of contemporary water management in order to demonstrate...
This article provides a critical reading of some of the gendered dimensions of emergent water govern...
Contemporary market-based (i.e. neoliberal) 'green economy' approaches to environmental degradation ...
We welcome this opportunity to participate in this important dialogue between political ecology and ...
This book recognizes the centrality of gender as an organizing principle in the ways water is envis...
This chapter provides a brief overview of ecofeminist theory. It charts its rise due to the percepti...
Because water is pivotal for health and livelihoods, inadequate access to water may be a significant...
Considers Bolivian Andean indigenous forms of democracy and resistance to neoliberal water privatiza...
Feminist theory articulates a position that confronts dualisms and shows that entities previously se...
Ecology and constructivism are motivated by broadly shared political aspirations and subscribe to si...
Political Ecology is firmly established as an important area of enquiry within Geography that attend...
Postcolonial feminism rests on the fact that Western feminism does not suffice for all the women of ...