Get Free Shipping on orders over $89
Radical Geography : Climate Justice and Hope - Amanda Thomas

Radical Geography

Climate Justice and Hope

By: Amanda Thomas, Sophie Bond, Gradon Diprose

Paperback | 20 January 2023

At a Glance

Paperback


$47.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $11.94 with

 or 
In Stock and Ships in 1-2 business days

Stopping Oil dives into the story of how deep-sea oil exploration became politicised in Aotearoa New Zealand, how community groups mobilised against it and the backlash that followed. It is also a story of activists exercising an ethic of care and responsibility, and how that solidarity was masked and silenced by the neoliberal state.

As Aotearoa New Zealand began to pursue deep-sea oil as part of its development agenda, a powerful climate justice campaign emerged, comprising of a range of autonomous 'Oil Free' groups around the country, NGOs like Greenpeace, and iwi and hapu (Maori tribal groups). As their influence increased, the state employed different tactics to silence them, starting with media representations designed to delegitimise, followed by securitisation and surveillance that controlled their activities, and finally targeted state-sanctioned violence and dehumanisation.

By highlighting geographies of hope for radical progressive change, the authors focus on the many examples of the campaign where solidarity and political responsibility shone through the repression, leading us towards a brighter future for climate justice across the globe.

Industry Reviews

'This clearly written political geography documents an important period of climate activism in Aotearoa New Zealand, with wider relevance for democratic activism abroad. It connects direct action environmental activism with a feminist ethics and politics of care, with theoretical relevance for students, researchers and activists far beyond these shores'

-- Kelly Dombroski, an editor of 'New Zealand Geographer'

'Follows the entanglement of racial capitalism, colonialism and western modernity that situates resource extraction in Aotearoa New Zealand. Drawing on the authors' own experiences of direct action and resistance, it also outlines a hopeful ethics of care through which meaningful changes can be achieved'

-- Jo Sharp, Professor of Geography, University of St Andrews, Scotland

More in Central Government Policies

Gold Standard? : Remembering the Hawke government - Frank Bongiorno

RRP $39.99

$33.75

16%
OFF
Nature's Last Dance : Tales of wonder in an age of extinction - Natalie Kyriacou
Our Voices : 2nd Edition - Aboriginal Social Work - Bindi Bennett

RRP $110.00

$90.99

17%
OFF
Fed Up : A Chef's Adventures in Food, Farming and Feminism - Lucy Ridge
Capital in the Twenty-First Century - Thomas Piketty

RRP $43.95

$34.75

21%
OFF
Suicide of a Nation : Immigration, Islam, Identity - Matt Goodwin
How to Blow Up a Pipeline : Learning to Fight in a World on Fire - Andreas Malm