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This third edition builds on the previous editions' pioneering focus on anthropology's burgeoning contribution to climate change by revealing the extent to which anthropologists' contributions are considered to be critical by climate scientists, policymakers, affected communities and other rights-holders.

Produktbeschreibung
This third edition builds on the previous editions' pioneering focus on anthropology's burgeoning contribution to climate change by revealing the extent to which anthropologists' contributions are considered to be critical by climate scientists, policymakers, affected communities and other rights-holders.


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Autorenporträt
Susan A. Crate is an environmental and cognitive anthropologist and Professor Emeritus of George Mason University, USA. Mark Nuttall is Professor and Henry Marshall Tory Chair of Anthropology at the University of Alberta, Canada. He is also Adjunct Professor at Ilisimatusarfik/University of Greenland and the Greenland Climate Research Centre in Nuuk, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.
Rezensionen
"This third edition of Anthropology and Climate Change is an excellent assemblage of articles and case studies exploring the reorientations required for fully capturing the multiple and complexly intertwined challenges of climate change, the need to reconfigure through a process of world-making different ways (worlds) of envisioning how we relate to one another and to our environments, and finally, the problems and pitfalls that occur when global policy fails to recognize local capacities and vulnerabilities. Challenging the neoliberal logic that negates the possibility of other possible futures, essentially construing neoliberal capitalism as some ultimate stage of human evolution (Baschet 2003), the authors assert that anthropology thus must tap into the full array of resources, past, contemporary and imagined, for guides for creating alternative futures beyond the current relentless construction of risk. Framing the focus of the third edition with the subtitle "From Transformations to World-Making," Crate and Nuttall and the various authors contend that if climate change doesn't move us toward imagining other worlds (ways) than current neoliberal approaches, we never will, and the consequences will be catastrophic. The third edition of Anthropology and Climate Change moves that discussion significantly forward."

Anthony Oliver-Smith, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, University of Florida