Graeme Hayes is Reader in Political Sociology at Aston University, UK. His research focuses on environmental social movements, civil disobedience, and the criminal trials of activists. His most recent book is Breaking Laws: Violence and Civil Disobedience in Protest (2019). He is an editor of Environmental Politics, and Consulting Editor for Social Movement Studies.
Sikina Jinnah is Associate Professor of Environmental Studies at UC Santa Cruz, USA. Her research on global environmental politics focuses on climate change, climate engineering, and the intersection of trade and environmental policy. Her most recent book is Greening through Trade: How American Trade Policy is Linked to Environmental Protection Abroad (2020). She is an editor of Environmental Politics.
Prakash Kashwan is Associate Professor of Political Science and Co-Director of the Research Program on Economic and Social Rights, Human Rights Institute, University of Connecticut, Storrs, USA. He is the author of Democracy in the Woods: Environmental Conservation and Social Justice in India, Tanzania, and Mexico (2017), and an editor of Environmental Politics.
David M. Konisky is Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University, USA. His research focuses on U.S. environmental politics and policy, regulation, federalism, environmental justice, and public opinion. He edited the Handbook of US Environmental Policy (2020) and is an editor of Environmental Politics.
Sherilyn MacGregor is Reader in Environmental Politics at the University of Manchester, UK. Her research focuses on the relationships between environmental (un)sustainability and social inequality, applying insights from ecofeminist and other critical political theories. She is Editor of the Handbook of Gender and Environment (Routledge, 2017) and an editor of Environmental Politics.
John M. Meyer is Professor in the Department of Politics at Humboldt State University, USA. His current work explores the intersection between climate politics and the political potentials and dangers of populism. Meyer is the author of the award-winning Engaging the Everyday: Environmental Social Criticism and the Resonance Dilemma (2015). He is Editor-in-chief of Environmental Politics.
Anthony R. Zito is Professor of European Public Policy at Newcastle University, UK. He has been an editor of Environmental Politics for ten years. His research focuses on environmental governance and European Union decision-making. He has authored and co-edited numerous journal articles and volumes including The Future of European Union Environmental Politics and Policy (Routledge, 2020).
Introduction: Trajectories in environmental politics 1. Continuities and changes; voices and silences: a critical analysis of the first three decades of scholarship in Environmental Politics 2. Making matter great again? Ecofeminism, new materialism and the everyday turn in environmental politics 3. The future of 'environmental' policy in the Anthropocene: time for a paradigm shift 4. Nature, limits and form- of- life 5. New directions in environmental justice studies: examining the state and violence 6. Multispecies justice: theories, challenges, and a research agenda for environmental politics 7. The knowledge politics of climate change loss and damage across scales of governance 8. The limits of the loops: critical environmental politics and the Circular Economy 9. When do environmental NGOs work? A test of the conditional effectiveness of environmental advocacy 10. What's different about the environment? Environmental INGOs in comparative perspective 11. Right- wing populist parties and environmental politics: insights from the Austrian Freedom Party's support for the glyphosate ban 12. Greening states and societies: from transitions to great transformations 13. Climate changed urban futures: environmental politics in the anthropocene city 14. Imagination and critique in environmental politics
This book explores the dominant framings and paradigms of environmental politics, the relationship between academic analysis and environmental politics, and reflects on the first thirty years of the journal, Environmental Politics.