Whose growth in whose planetary boundaries? Decolonising planetary justice in the Anthropocene

IF 1.7 Q2 GEOGRAPHY Geo-Geography and Environment Pub Date : 2023-08-07 DOI:10.1002/geo2.128
Farhana Sultana
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This critical analysis examines the geopolitics of planetary environmental injustice and the imperative for systems change to address the intertwined crises of climate breakdown and unsustainable economic growth. Climate breakdown has heightened attention to uneven anthropogenic use and abuse of the planet's biosphere and common pool resources. Recent arguments by climate scholars suggest that various planetary boundaries have already been breached, resulting in dramatic and harmful socio-ecological consequences. These trends raise crucial questions of equity and justice, especially concerning responsibilities and impacts. By centring Global South perspectives, prevailing ideologies promoting hyperconsumption, overproduction and waste are interrogated. The incommensurability of socioecological justice with ongoing unsustainable extractive and exploitative economic growth paradigms, which contribute to further transgressions of planetary boundaries, underscore the urgency of decolonising underlying colonial-capitalist ideologies and practices. This entails a fundamental reformulation of paradigms to envision a more just and sustainable future, one that dismantles oppressive systems and advances justice-oriented praxis.

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谁在谁的星球边界生长?人类世的非殖民化行星正义
这一批判性分析考察了全球环境不公正的地缘政治,以及制度变革的必要性,以解决气候崩溃和不可持续经济增长这两个相互交织的危机。气候崩溃使人们更加关注人类对地球生物圈和共同资源的不均衡利用和滥用。气候学者最近的论点表明,各种行星边界已经被打破,造成了巨大而有害的社会生态后果。这些趋势提出了公平和正义的关键问题,特别是关于责任和影响的问题。通过集中全球南方的观点,对促进过度消费、生产过剩和浪费的主流意识形态进行了质疑。社会生态正义与持续的不可持续的采掘和剥削性经济增长模式的不可通约性,助长了对地球边界的进一步侵犯,突显了殖民资本主义意识形态和实践的非殖民化的紧迫性。这需要从根本上重新制定范式,以设想一个更加公正和可持续的未来,一个摧毁压迫性制度并推进以正义为导向的实践的未来。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
25 weeks
期刊介绍: Geo is a fully open access international journal publishing original articles from across the spectrum of geographical and environmental research. Geo welcomes submissions which make a significant contribution to one or more of the journal’s aims. These are to: • encompass the breadth of geographical, environmental and related research, based on original scholarship in the sciences, social sciences and humanities; • bring new understanding to and enhance communication between geographical research agendas, including human-environment interactions, global North-South relations and academic-policy exchange; • advance spatial research and address the importance of geographical enquiry to the understanding of, and action about, contemporary issues; • foster methodological development, including collaborative forms of knowledge production, interdisciplinary approaches and the innovative use of quantitative and/or qualitative data sets; • publish research articles, review papers, data and digital humanities papers, and commentaries which are of international significance.
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