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Alcarrás and the normalization of farmers’ disappearance
July 14, 2022
The gendered consequences of ‘undone science’ in a pesticide-contaminated area in Nicaragua
September 13, 2022

Summer break note 2022

Published by Undisciplined Environments on July 27, 2022

Source: milk magazine

By Undisciplined Environments

Summer break note with good wishes and a selection of events and blog posts for the pause, from the Undisciplined Environments Editorial Collective.

Dear readers

As we are used to at this time of the year, we will take a short summer break from publishing during the month of August, to recharge and continue working together the Fall. We wish everyone a restful and joyful summer, with renewed energies in the struggles for eco-social justice.

In the meantime, you can check out our most recently published posts:

  • Alcarrás and the normalization of farmers’ disappearance, by Lucía Argüelles Ramos
  • Political Ecologies of Pesticides: An introduction, by Lucía Argüelles Ramos. 
  • Food saving: too good not to commodify, by Juliane Miller
  • Reconceptualising boundaries, by Giorgos Velegrakis
  • Women Vs. Mining: A Video Project, by Novi Asti Lalasati and Eleonore Witschaß
  • Public Water Services in times of emergency, by Gemma Gasseau
  • Conflicts over the memorialization of water in Barcelona, by Lucia Alexandra Popartan and Camil Ungureanu  
  • Necro-Industry, Climate Trauma, and Radical Healing, by Irina Velicu
  • Environmental Inequalities in Cairo’s Urban Housing Sector, by Haley Parzonko
  • Colonial Ecologies of the Half Earth, by Austin Miles

 

You can also read some other most viewed posts since last September:

  • Choosing to “stay with the trouble”, by Colectivo Mariposas -Jennifer J. Casolo, Selmira Flores Cruz and Noémi Gonda-, and Andrea J. Nightingale.
  • Keeping the world alive and healthy – An interview with Stefania Barca, by Ethemcan Turhan
  • The unequal university will never be ‘sustainable’, by Ana Diaz Vidal, Clara Freudenberg, Isabelle Darmon
  • Degrowth and Feminist Political Ecology and Decoloniality, by Wendy Harcourt, Irene Leonardelli, Enid Still and Anna Voss
  • Autogestión, reclaiming the right to self-management of water, by Marcela Olivera and Stefano Archidiacono (also in Spanish)

 

Finally, you can revisit some of the most popular posts from previous years:

  • Far Right Ecologism and the Conceptual Deficiencies of Ecofascism, by Balsa Lubarda
  • Green New Deal(s): A Resource List for Political Ecologists, by Gustavo García López and Diego Andreucci  
  • Building Eco-Paradise in End Times, by Olea Morris
  • Emergenciocracy: why demanding the “climate emergency” is risky, by Giacomo D’Alisa
  • Defending limits is not Malthusian, by Giorgos Kallis
  • Undisciplining Political Ecology: A Minifesto, by Marco Armiero, Stefania Barca and Irina Velicu
  • Weaving musical spaces of indigenous resistance for environmental justice by Álvaro Fernández-Llamazares
  • “Namami Brahmaputra”: Worshipping a river, ignoring its materialities by Mitul Baruah
  • The dystopian world of the Handmaid’s tale Part 1/2 and Part 2/2, by Júlia Hosta Cuy
  • The trouble with rewilding, by Irma Allen
  • Getting to know Escher by Panagiota Kotsila

We are always happy to receive new contributions. If you have an already prepared contribution or an idea, check out our Contributors guidelines and send us an email at undisciplinedenvironments@gmail.com.

 

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