ABSTRACT

Socioecological Transformations confronts dominant framings of transformation that either remain apolitical and ahistorical, or overemphasizes the structural causes, while bypassing the ontological roots of the present-day socioecological violence and destruction. It challenges the technocratic and structuralist tendencies that either reduce transformation to policy tweaks, or to social movements and activism.

This volume reclaims socioecological transformations as a radical, justice-centred theory-praxis. By connecting the structural and the ontological roots of the colonial-racial-capitalist system of oppression, the book exposes how materialist-dualist ontology and associated worldviews uphold hierarchies of worth, which in turn serve and uphold the colonial-racial-capitalist system of oppression. In doing so, it widens the spectrum of viable responses to include in addition to social movements and activism, those that unsettle the ontological bases of our socioecological calamities—the human exceptionalism and the illusion of separation. The fifteen chapters span diverse geographies, struggles, and approaches, weaving together onto-epistemic inquiry with grounded transformative practices, movements and action. The contributions share the common focus on justice as both motivation and a guiding principle for transformations. The book calls for transformation where being, knowing, and doing are reimagined in relational, life-affirming terms.

A vital resource for students, academics, activists inspired by political ecology, feminist studies, decolonial and relational approaches, social movements, and transformations, but also practitioners and policy actors seeking to engage transformation beyond surface-level solutions. Socioecological Transformations invites readers to embrace complexity, plurality, along the paradoxes that transformations entail, while building solidarities across polarized strategies, ontologies and worldviews.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter 1|23 pages

Just global socioecological transformations

Title
It takes a worldview change to change the world?
Size: 0.39 MB

chapter 3|15 pages

Potentiality and responsibility

Title
Tenets of a deep relational ontology and implications for transformations research and practice
Size: 0.35 MB

chapter 4|18 pages

When farm worlds change

Title
Ontological transformations in the web of life
Size: 0.36 MB

chapter 5|16 pages

Indigenous spiritualities

Title
Transforming the future through ancestral knowledge
Size: 0.36 MB
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chapter 8|18 pages

In search of alternatives to development

Title
Learning from grounded initiatives 1
Size: 0.56 MB

chapter 9|22 pages

Transformative bottom-up urban planning

Title
A case from a fishing community in coastal Mumbai, India
Size: 3.63 MB

chapter 10|17 pages

Exploring small-scale farming as ecological livelihoods

Title
Agricultural sustainability transformation in the minority worlds
Size: 0.36 MB
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chapter 13|20 pages

EU green transition as a barrier for socioecological transformations

Title
Deradicalizing transformations, degrowth, decoloniality, and justice in the EU's green politics
Size: 0.40 MB

chapter 14|17 pages

Barriers to transformations in the EU's external forest governance

Title
Indigenous rights in the EU-Honduras Voluntary Partnership Agreement
Size: 0.36 MB

chapter 15|13 pages

Broadening the scope for just socioecological transformations

Title
Ideas, structures, and alliances
Size: 0.34 MB