Beschreibung:
This book, by leading scholars of environmental movements, examines how trans-national politics is changing the nature of environmentalism through examining both wider theoretical and comparative questions derived from case studies grounded in Europe, Africa, America, Asia and the Middle East.
1. Beyond Borders: Transnational Politics, Social Movements and Modern Environmentalism 2. Expanding the Green Public Space: Post-Colonial Connections 3. Non-Governmental Organizations and Governance States: The Impact of Transnational Environmental Management Networks in Madagascar 4. Traversing More than Speed Bumps: Green Politics under Authoritarian Regimes in Burma and Iran 5. Facing South? British Environment Movement Organizations and the Challenge of Globalisation 6. Neither 'North' nor 'South': The Environment and Civil Society in Post-Conflict Bosnia-Herzegovina 7. Transnational Influences on Patterns of Mobilization within Environmental Movements in Hungary 8. Vulnerability and Disobedience: New Repertoires in French Environmental Protests 9. Entangled Logics and Grassroots: Imagineres of Global Justice Networks 10. Friends of the Earth International: Negotiating a Transnational Identity 11. Green Public Spheres and the Green Governance State: The Politics of Emancipation and Ecological Conditionality