ABSTRACT

The Political Ecology of Austerity explores the environmental dimension of austerity that has thus far escaped academic, policy, and media attention.

Offering a better comprehension of the full socio-environmental impact of austerity measures, the book highlights the importance of considering environmental issues when designing responses to economic crisis in the future. Mobilising detailed case studies from across the world, the volume documents the ways in which austerity impacts global and local ecologies, shapes environmental conflicts and gives rise to new forms and practices of social moblisation and resistance. Bringing together theoretical debates and rigorous case studies, the book proposes ‘the political ecology of austerity’ as an appropriate method of analysis that can inform our understanding of the shift in environmental protection policies and the intensification of growth practices (green or otherwise) that followed the 2008 global economic crisis. The Political Ecology of Austerity discloses austerity to be a globalised set of tools not only for budgetary discipline, but also for socio-environmental discipline that justifies the continuation of capital accumulation at the expense of further global environmental degradation.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of social and political sciences, environmental studies, urban studies, and political ecology.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Austerity as an environmentally dangerous idea: A political ecology approach

part I|39 pages

Re-engineering socio-environmental relations under austerity

chapter 1|18 pages

Austerity and the rebel city

The right to the (smart) city in Barcelona

chapter 2|19 pages

On a thought and a prayer

Austerity, climate denialism, and disaster in neoliberal Australia

part II|59 pages

Re-enacting socio-environmental exclusion under austerity

chapter 3|18 pages

The coloniality of austerity

On crisis, finance, and Indigenous resistance in British Columbia's forests

chapter 4|19 pages

When disaster meets austerity

Environmental inequality and historical injustice during crisis

chapter 5|20 pages

Politics of austerity and ‘otherness’ as public health determinants

The malaria epidemic in Greece during crisis (2009–2014)

part III|62 pages

Re-awakening socio-environmental movements against austerity

chapter 6|20 pages

The politicised ecologies of austerity

Anti-austerity environmentalism during and after the Greek crisis

chapter 7|21 pages

Resisting austerity in the era of COVID-19

Between nationwide mobilisation and decentralised organising in Ecuador

chapter 8|19 pages

Political ecologies of value

Austerity and socio-environmental conflict in the Italian South

part IV|40 pages

Re-asserting the commons as a socio-environmental alternative against austerity

chapter 9|21 pages

Urban gardening and post-austerity in Lisbon

Between subaltern urbanism and green gentrification

chapter 10|17 pages

Community gardening and the geographies of everyday lives in the city

Reclaiming the urban commons in austerity Greece

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

Austerity from financial to pandemic crisis