Dunion argues for a sustained challenge to environmental injustice. He covers the core issues of community attitudes to risk; loss of trust in science; the role of multinationals in responding to challenge; and perceptions of injustice.
Gives a real insight into what the high-sounding pricniple of environmental justice actually means in practice, and demonstrates how critical it is to our future. -- What on Earth? magazine (Friends of the Earth) This book explains what the problems are with our planning system, how it needs to be changed and what the present problems are in challenging unwanted developments. -- Robin Harper, MSP for the Scottish Green Party Those who make trouble make progress. Kevin Dunion is a veteran trouble-maker, and his compelling account of people campaigning for environmental justice will inspire others to do the same. Kevin Dunion chronicles relentlessly the attempts of people, and failure of the system, to provide Scots with an acceptable environment ... This book sets out many examples of successful troublemaking, as well as highlighting the changes which should be made to bring about good living conditions for all. How big is the environment? The whole world? Or your backyard? Or, as Kevin Dunion sees it, both? He takes the slogan 'act local, think global' very seriously in his account of Scottish environmental injustices in Troublemakers. The greedy importers of garbage who fill the dumps that plague Scottish neighbourhoods are pursuing profit across national boundaries. Roads are undermined by coal extraction, beaches are polluted - and all this can be traced back to international corporate pressures. So for a guide on how to kick up a stink about a stink, this is great stuff: foul deeds, telling successes and an end to helplessness in the face of environmental insults. Gives a real insight into what the high-sounding pricniple of environmental justice actually means in practice, and demonstrates how critical it is to our future. This book explains what the problems are with our planning system, how it needs to be changed and what the present problems are in challenging unwanted developments. Those who make trouble make progress. Kevin Dunion is a veteran trouble-maker, and his compelling account of people campaigning for environmental justice will inspire others to do the same. Kevin Dunion chronicles relentlessly the attempts of people, and failure of the system, to provide Scots with an acceptable environment ... This book sets out many examples of successful troublemaking, as well as highlighting the changes which should be made to bring about good living conditions for all. How big is the environment? The whole world? Or your backyard? Or, as Kevin Dunion sees it, both? He takes the slogan 'act local, think global' very seriously in his account of Scottish environmental injustices in Troublemakers. The greedy importers of garbage who fill the dumps that plague Scottish neighbourhoods are pursuing profit across national boundaries. Roads are undermined by coal extraction, beaches are polluted - and all this can be traced back to international corporate pressures. So for a guide on how to kick up a stink about a stink, this is great stuff: foul deeds, telling successes and an end to helplessness in the face of environmental insults.
| Preface | |
| Introduction: Trailing across Dirty Scotland | p. 1 |
| Environmental Justice - Rights, Decency and Fairness | p. 9 |
| Causing Trouble - Asking the Emperor's Clothes Question | p. 41 |
| Silencing Trouble | p. 57 |
| Cowboys and Sheriffs | p. 83 |
| Whose Environment, Whose Risk? | p. 105 |
| The Right to Know - What is Happening in our Environment? | p. 136 |
| Sustainable Development in Scotland - Getting beyond the Rhetoric | p. 151 |
| Best-Laid Plans | p. 188 |
| Bridging the Gap | p. 211 |
| Bibliography | p. 233 |
| Index | p. 241 |
| Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. |
ISBN: 9780748617814
ISBN-10: 0748617817
Audience:
Professional
For Ages: 22+ years old
Format:
Paperback
Language:
English
Number Of Pages: 256
Published: 1st November 2003
Dimensions (cm): 21.6 x 13.8
x 2.2
Weight (kg): 0.357