The Environmentalism of the Poor: A Study of Ecological Conflicts and Valuation

Front Cover
Edward Elgar Pub., 2002 - Business & Economics - 312 pages
The book analyses several manifestations of the growing 'environmental justice movement', and also of 'popular environmentalism' and the 'environmentalism of the poor', which will be seen in the coming decades as driving forces in the process to achieve an ecologically sustainable society. The author studies, in detail, many ecological distribution conflicts in history and at present, in urban and rural settings, showing how poor people often favour resource conservation. The environment is thus not so much a luxury of the rich as a necessity of the poor. It concludes with the fundamental questions: who has the right to impose a language of valuation and who has the power to simplify complexity?"--Pub. desc.

About the author (2002)

Joan Martínez-Alier, Professor of Economics and Economic History, Universitat Autňnoma de Barcelona, Spain, Recipient of the Balzan Prize in 2020 and the Holberg Prize in 2023

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