Rethinking Green Politics: Nature, Virtue and ProgressW. J. M. MacKenzie Prize winner for the best book in Political Science published in 1999`Of the sixteen books submitted, some of high quality, this one was agreed to be in a class of its own.... The book breaks new ground in `green' political theory, and in an engaging manner, educates those anxious to be good citizens and challenges those responsible for public policy, in a highly topical and globally important discourse.... Barry's immanent critique, his insistence that we build on what there is, his resistance to the easy anti-statist line, his sane and balanced outlook, is intellectually brave in this often rather clamant territory. The analysis of ecological morality, individual stewardship, and collective responsibility provides an original and seminal treatise that advances the discipline as a whole' - Professor Andrew Dunsire |
Contents
From Deep Ecology to Ecological | 12 |
Naturalism and the Ethical Basis | 38 |
A Reconstructive | 77 |
The State Governance and the Politics of Collective | 101 |
Green Political Economy | 142 |
Green Citizenship | 193 |
Nature Virtue and Progress | 248 |
267 | |
283 | |
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Common terms and phrases
anarchist animals anthropocentrism appropriate argued aspect bioregional Bookchin central character citizens civil society collective ecological management concern consumption contemporary context critical culture decision-making deep ecology deliberative democracy Dobson Dryzek Eckersley eco-anarchism eco-anarchist ecocentric ecological crisis ecological modernization ecological problems ecological stewardship ecological virtue ecologically rational ecologists economic growth economy-ecology ecosystems environment environmental economics environmental ethics environmental policy environmental problems example forms free market environmentalism global green argument green citizenship green democratic green moral green political economy green political theory green theory human interests human-nature relations ideology individuals institutions issues last chapter liberal liberal democracy libertarian municipalism London metaphysical mode non-human world normative particular perspective position precautionary principle preferences principles production progress radical reason regulation rejection relationship requires role self-reliance sense simply social ecology social practices social-environmental interaction social-environmental metabolism social-environmental relations speciesism sphere suggested tion transformation valuation values virtue ethics welfare