The Routledge Handbook of Waste Studies
Herausgeber: Gille, Zsuzsa; Lepawsky, Josh
The Routledge Handbook of Waste Studies
Herausgeber: Gille, Zsuzsa; Lepawsky, Josh
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The Routledge Handbook of Waste Studies offers a comprehensive survey of the new field of waste studies, critically interrogating the cultural, social, economic and political systems within which waste is created, managed and circulated.
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The Routledge Handbook of Waste Studies offers a comprehensive survey of the new field of waste studies, critically interrogating the cultural, social, economic and political systems within which waste is created, managed and circulated.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 358
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 638g
- ISBN-13: 9781032188959
- ISBN-10: 1032188952
- Artikelnr.: 71236304
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 358
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 638g
- ISBN-13: 9781032188959
- ISBN-10: 1032188952
- Artikelnr.: 71236304
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Zsuzsa Gille is Professor of Sociology and Director of Global Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of Paprika, Foie Gras, and Red Mud: The Politics of Materiality in the European Union (2016) and From the Cult of Waste to the Trash Heap of History: The Politics of Waste in Socialist and Postsocialist Hungary (2007-recipient of honorable mention of the AAASS Davis Prize). Josh Lepawsky is Professor of Geography at Memorial University, Canada. He is author of Reassembling Rubbish: Worlding Electronic Waste and "Planet of fixers? Mapping the middle grounds of independent and do-it-yourself information and communication technology maintenance and repair".
PART I: INTRODUCING THE FIELD OF WASTE STUDIES 1. Introduction: Waste Studies as a Field
Zsuzsa Gille and Joshua Lepawsky 2. At Home with the Waste Scholar
Zsuzsa Gille
Joshua Lepawsky
Catherine Alexander
and Nicky Gregson PART II: QUESTIONS WASTE SCHOLARS ASK 3. Matter out of place
Max Liboiron 4. Waste and Whiteness
Joshua O. Reno and Britt Halvorson 5. Landfill Life and the Many Lives of Landfills
Patrick O'Hare 6. Reading the Signs: Some Ways Waste is Framed in Tunisia
Jamie Furniss 7. Unmaking the Made: The Troubled Temporalities of Waste
Heike Weber 8. Commodification and Respect: Indigenous Contributions to the Sociology of Waste
Michelle Schmidt PART III: METHODS WASTE SCHOLARS USE 9. Comparative Methods for the Study of Waste
Raul Pacheco-Vega 10. Teaching Critical Waste Studies in Higher Education
Kate Parizeu 11. Hunting for Hidden Treasures: A Research Methodology on China's Informal Recycling Sector
Benjamin Steuer 12. Waste Metrics from the Ground Up
Samantha MacBride 13. The Potential Role of Gamification: An Innovative Intervention Method in Waste Studies
Tammara Soma
Belinda Li and Virginia MacLaren PART IV: CASES WASTE SCHOLARS INVESTIGATE 14. The Experience of Nuclear Waste
Romain Garcier 15. Uranium Legacies and Settler-Colonial Imaginaries: Nuclear Waste as History
Proximity and Colonial matter
Emily Potter 16. Brownfields as Waste/Race Governance: US Contaminated Property Redevelopment and Racial Capitalism
Shiloh Krupar 17. Of Ships of Doom and Icebergs: Early Perspectives on the Global Hazardous Waste Trade
Kate O'Neill 18. Oil Wasting: The Necroaesthetics of Energy Expenditure
Amanda Boetzkes 19. Waste Picker Organizations and Urban Sustainability
Jutta Gutberlet 20. Waste
Labor and Livelihoods in South Africa
Mary Lawhon
Nate Millington
and Kathleen Stokes 21. Prepping for the [Insert Here] Apocalypse and Wasting the Future
Myra Hird and Jacob Riha
Zsuzsa Gille and Joshua Lepawsky 2. At Home with the Waste Scholar
Zsuzsa Gille
Joshua Lepawsky
Catherine Alexander
and Nicky Gregson PART II: QUESTIONS WASTE SCHOLARS ASK 3. Matter out of place
Max Liboiron 4. Waste and Whiteness
Joshua O. Reno and Britt Halvorson 5. Landfill Life and the Many Lives of Landfills
Patrick O'Hare 6. Reading the Signs: Some Ways Waste is Framed in Tunisia
Jamie Furniss 7. Unmaking the Made: The Troubled Temporalities of Waste
Heike Weber 8. Commodification and Respect: Indigenous Contributions to the Sociology of Waste
Michelle Schmidt PART III: METHODS WASTE SCHOLARS USE 9. Comparative Methods for the Study of Waste
Raul Pacheco-Vega 10. Teaching Critical Waste Studies in Higher Education
Kate Parizeu 11. Hunting for Hidden Treasures: A Research Methodology on China's Informal Recycling Sector
Benjamin Steuer 12. Waste Metrics from the Ground Up
Samantha MacBride 13. The Potential Role of Gamification: An Innovative Intervention Method in Waste Studies
Tammara Soma
Belinda Li and Virginia MacLaren PART IV: CASES WASTE SCHOLARS INVESTIGATE 14. The Experience of Nuclear Waste
Romain Garcier 15. Uranium Legacies and Settler-Colonial Imaginaries: Nuclear Waste as History
Proximity and Colonial matter
Emily Potter 16. Brownfields as Waste/Race Governance: US Contaminated Property Redevelopment and Racial Capitalism
Shiloh Krupar 17. Of Ships of Doom and Icebergs: Early Perspectives on the Global Hazardous Waste Trade
Kate O'Neill 18. Oil Wasting: The Necroaesthetics of Energy Expenditure
Amanda Boetzkes 19. Waste Picker Organizations and Urban Sustainability
Jutta Gutberlet 20. Waste
Labor and Livelihoods in South Africa
Mary Lawhon
Nate Millington
and Kathleen Stokes 21. Prepping for the [Insert Here] Apocalypse and Wasting the Future
Myra Hird and Jacob Riha
PART I: INTRODUCING THE FIELD OF WASTE STUDIES 1. Introduction: Waste Studies as a Field
Zsuzsa Gille and Joshua Lepawsky 2. At Home with the Waste Scholar
Zsuzsa Gille
Joshua Lepawsky
Catherine Alexander
and Nicky Gregson PART II: QUESTIONS WASTE SCHOLARS ASK 3. Matter out of place
Max Liboiron 4. Waste and Whiteness
Joshua O. Reno and Britt Halvorson 5. Landfill Life and the Many Lives of Landfills
Patrick O'Hare 6. Reading the Signs: Some Ways Waste is Framed in Tunisia
Jamie Furniss 7. Unmaking the Made: The Troubled Temporalities of Waste
Heike Weber 8. Commodification and Respect: Indigenous Contributions to the Sociology of Waste
Michelle Schmidt PART III: METHODS WASTE SCHOLARS USE 9. Comparative Methods for the Study of Waste
Raul Pacheco-Vega 10. Teaching Critical Waste Studies in Higher Education
Kate Parizeu 11. Hunting for Hidden Treasures: A Research Methodology on China's Informal Recycling Sector
Benjamin Steuer 12. Waste Metrics from the Ground Up
Samantha MacBride 13. The Potential Role of Gamification: An Innovative Intervention Method in Waste Studies
Tammara Soma
Belinda Li and Virginia MacLaren PART IV: CASES WASTE SCHOLARS INVESTIGATE 14. The Experience of Nuclear Waste
Romain Garcier 15. Uranium Legacies and Settler-Colonial Imaginaries: Nuclear Waste as History
Proximity and Colonial matter
Emily Potter 16. Brownfields as Waste/Race Governance: US Contaminated Property Redevelopment and Racial Capitalism
Shiloh Krupar 17. Of Ships of Doom and Icebergs: Early Perspectives on the Global Hazardous Waste Trade
Kate O'Neill 18. Oil Wasting: The Necroaesthetics of Energy Expenditure
Amanda Boetzkes 19. Waste Picker Organizations and Urban Sustainability
Jutta Gutberlet 20. Waste
Labor and Livelihoods in South Africa
Mary Lawhon
Nate Millington
and Kathleen Stokes 21. Prepping for the [Insert Here] Apocalypse and Wasting the Future
Myra Hird and Jacob Riha
Zsuzsa Gille and Joshua Lepawsky 2. At Home with the Waste Scholar
Zsuzsa Gille
Joshua Lepawsky
Catherine Alexander
and Nicky Gregson PART II: QUESTIONS WASTE SCHOLARS ASK 3. Matter out of place
Max Liboiron 4. Waste and Whiteness
Joshua O. Reno and Britt Halvorson 5. Landfill Life and the Many Lives of Landfills
Patrick O'Hare 6. Reading the Signs: Some Ways Waste is Framed in Tunisia
Jamie Furniss 7. Unmaking the Made: The Troubled Temporalities of Waste
Heike Weber 8. Commodification and Respect: Indigenous Contributions to the Sociology of Waste
Michelle Schmidt PART III: METHODS WASTE SCHOLARS USE 9. Comparative Methods for the Study of Waste
Raul Pacheco-Vega 10. Teaching Critical Waste Studies in Higher Education
Kate Parizeu 11. Hunting for Hidden Treasures: A Research Methodology on China's Informal Recycling Sector
Benjamin Steuer 12. Waste Metrics from the Ground Up
Samantha MacBride 13. The Potential Role of Gamification: An Innovative Intervention Method in Waste Studies
Tammara Soma
Belinda Li and Virginia MacLaren PART IV: CASES WASTE SCHOLARS INVESTIGATE 14. The Experience of Nuclear Waste
Romain Garcier 15. Uranium Legacies and Settler-Colonial Imaginaries: Nuclear Waste as History
Proximity and Colonial matter
Emily Potter 16. Brownfields as Waste/Race Governance: US Contaminated Property Redevelopment and Racial Capitalism
Shiloh Krupar 17. Of Ships of Doom and Icebergs: Early Perspectives on the Global Hazardous Waste Trade
Kate O'Neill 18. Oil Wasting: The Necroaesthetics of Energy Expenditure
Amanda Boetzkes 19. Waste Picker Organizations and Urban Sustainability
Jutta Gutberlet 20. Waste
Labor and Livelihoods in South Africa
Mary Lawhon
Nate Millington
and Kathleen Stokes 21. Prepping for the [Insert Here] Apocalypse and Wasting the Future
Myra Hird and Jacob Riha