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Violent Environments

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Do environmental problems and processes produce violence? Current U.S. policy about environmental conflict and scholarly work on environmental security assume direct causal links between population growth, resource scarcity, and violence. This belief, a staple of governmental decision-making during both Clinton administrations and widely held in the environmental security field, depends on particular assumptions about the nature of the state, the role of population growth, and the causes of environmental degradation. The conventional understanding of environmental security, and its assumptions about the relation between violence and the environment, are challenged and refuted in Violent Environments. Chapters by geographers, historians, anthropologists, and sociologists include accounts of ethnic war in Indonesia, petro-violence in Nigeria and Ecuador, wildlife conservation in Tanzania, and "friendly fire" at Russia's nuclear weapons sites. Violent Environments portrays violence as a site-specific phenomenon rooted in local histories and societies, yet connected to larger processes of material transformation and power relations. The authors argue that specific resource environments, including tropical forests and oil reserves, and environmental processes (such as deforestation, conservation, or resource abundance) are constituted by and in part constitute the political economy of access to and control over resources. Violent Environments demands new approaches to an international set of complex problems, powerfully arguing for deeper, more ethnographically informed analyses of the circumstances and processes that cause violence.

464 pages, Paperback

First published August 1, 2001

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About the author

Nancy Lee Peluso

14 books4 followers
Nancy Lee Peluso is an American rural sociologist. She is the Henry J. Vaux Distinguished Professor of Forest Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. In 2006, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Josh Ua.
1 review2 followers
July 24, 2012
Some chapters were fantastic while others seemed forced. It's worth checking out for sure, the intro chapter is enlightening, but if the thesis isn't developed in the first couple pages it may just be best to skip that one.
Profile Image for Allen.
61 reviews
July 15, 2007
I would particularly recommend the chapters by Hartman, Peluso, McCarthy, Watts, Fairhead and Neumann
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