The Anthropocene blues: Notes from Mississippi

2021 ◽  
pp. 205301962110015
Author(s):  
Jason Ludwig

This article argues for the importance of integrating histories of enslaved Africans and their descendants—including histories of resistance to racialized power structures—within narratives about the Anthropocene. It suggests that the Black Studies Scholar Clyde Wood’s concept of the “blues epistemology” offers conceptual tools for considering how Black political and intellectual traditions have strived to imagine and create a more livable world amid the entangled crises of racial injustice and ecological degradation. I argue that locating Black political thought within broader narratives of environmental change and economic development illuminates the racial dimensions of current global ecological crises and orients scholarship and political practice toward the spaces in which such thought is being animated today in response to the challenges of the Anthropocene.

2013 ◽  
Vol 36 (5) ◽  
pp. 485-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Chang ◽  
Bin-Bin Chen ◽  
Hui Jing Lu

AbstractThe target article provides an intermediate account of culture and freedom that is conceived to be curvilinear by treating economic development not as an adaptive outcome in response to climate but as a cause of culture parallel to climate. We argue that the extent of environmental variability, including climatic variability, affects cultural adaptation.


Balcanica ◽  
2007 ◽  
pp. 173-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milan Protic

Subject to transformation and change as any other political ideology Serbian Radicalism nevertheless revolved round some more or less permanent concepts, the most important being constitutionalism, parliamentary democracy, civil liberties and local self-government. Yet another basic aspect of the Radical Party's ideology, its national programme, may be seen as an external ingredient inasmuch as the national emancipation, liberation and unification of the Serbs were viewed as originating from internal freedom. It was only in the 1890s that their national programme became fully developed. Major features of the Party's political practice, on the other hand, were flexibility, pragmatism and cohesion.


2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 16-43
Author(s):  
Ben Fink

Roadside Theater is a populist theatre company. Refusing liberal elitism, activist vanguardism, and the authoritarian pseudo-populism of Donald Trump, Roadside works in grassroots partnerships that cross racial, political, and rural-urban lines. Combining theatre production, community organizing, and economic development, this work creates the conditions for residents of the Appalachian coalfields and neighbors nationwide to confront exploitative power structures and divisive culture wars, tell their own stories, build shared power and wealth, and create a future where “We Own What We Make.”


Author(s):  
Katharina Pistor

Legal systems and economic development stand in a complex, interdependent relation to one another. Attempts to identify a causal relation from law to economic outcomes have mostly failed, because they don’t take into account the effect of legal and economic change on power structures, and more broadly, on social relations. In part this can be attributed to the conceptual blindness of certain disciplines that focus on micro-constellations and largely ignore systemic effects; in part, it is the result of wishful thinking in policymaking institutions that have time and again tried to use law as an instrument for engineering economic change.


1978 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 221-256

INDIA: A. APPADORAI: Documents on Political Thought in Modern India—Vol. II. INDIA: S.N. GANGULY: Tradition, Modernity and Development: A Study in Contemporary Indian Society. INDIA: MINOO MASANI: Bliss was it in that Dawn…: A Political Memoir upto Independence. INDIA: SATYABRATA RAI CHOWDHURI: Leftist Movements in India: 1917–1947. INDIA: AMALENDU GUHA: Planter-Raj to Swaraj: Freedom Struggle and Electoral Politics in Assam 1826–1947. INDIA: B.G. DAS: The President of India. INDIA: K. SESHADRI: Indian Politics: Then and now—Essays in Historical Perspective. INDIA: RAJEEV DHAVAN : The Supreme Court of India: A Socio-Legal Critique of its Juristic Techniques. INDIA: KRISHNA PRASAD DE : Religious Freedom Under the Indian Constitution. INDIA: INDIAN RENAISSANCE INSTITUTE: People's Plan II: A Plan for India's Economic Development. INDIA: S.L.N. SIMHA and A. RAMAN, Eds.: Credit Planning: Objectives and Techniques. INDIA: E.S. SRINIVASAN: Financial Structure and Economic Development: (With Special Reference to India: 1951–1966). INDIA: H. VENKATASUBBIAH : Enterprise and Economic Change: 50 years of FICCI. INDIA: KALYANI BANDYOPADHYAYA : Agricultural Development in China and India: A Comparative Study. INDIA: V. C. BHUTANI: The Apotheosis of Imperialism: Indian Land Economy Under Curzon. INDIA: A. B. HIRAMANI : Social Change in Rural India: A Study of Two Villages in Maharashtra. INDIA: S. C. DUBE, Ed. : India Since Independence : Social Report on India 1947–1972. INDIA: M. G. KULKARNI : Problems of Tribal Developments: A Case Study. INDIA: J. P. NAIK : Some Perspectives on Non-Formal Education. INDIA: H. S. BHATIA, Ed. : Military History of British India (1607–1947). INDIA: P.N. KHERA: Operation Vijay: The Liberation of Goa and Other Portuguese Colonies in India (1961). INDIA: S.C. TEWARI: Indo-US Relations, 1947–1976.


2009 ◽  
Vol 106 (5) ◽  
pp. 1359-1363 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. H. Sandweiss ◽  
R. S. Solis ◽  
M. E. Moseley ◽  
D. K. Keefer ◽  
C. R. Ortloff

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