Entitle blog
Entitle blog
  • 13
  • 55 967
Urban Movements and Climate Change Book Launch
This is a recording of the online book launch - on March 4th 2024 - of "Urban Movements and Climate Change: Loss, Damage and Radical Adaptation" (Amsterdam University Press, 2023) co-edited by Marco Armiero, Ethemcan Turhan and Salvatore Paolo De Rosa. The event was co-hosted by "Resistance. A journal of Radical Environmental Humanities" while the work for the book was done during the Occupy Climate Change! project, a three-year project funded by the Swedish Agency Formas aiming to explore how grassroots and municipal innovations are tackling climate change.
The book launch starts with an introduction to Occupy Climate Change! (2018-2020) project and the edited volume itself by Prof. Marco Armiero (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, ICREA) and Dr. Ethemcan Turhan (University of Groningen). Our esteemed colleague and friend Prof. Erik Swyngedouw (University of Manchester) joins us to discuss and reflect on the book, followed by an intervention by Dr. Panagiota Kotsila (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona) and finally by a collective discussion moderated by Dr. Salvatore Paolo De Rosa (University of Copenhagen).
zhlédnutí: 118

Video

Joe Williams on Nexus Thinking
zhlédnutí 320Před 6 lety
The water-energy-food nexus has become a powerful framework for sustainable development that seeks to integrate the management of resource sectors for increased efficiency. However, its current mobilisation is fundamentally de-politicising, overlooking the contradictions and injustices of resource governance. Joe Williams gives us an overview.
Tania Murray Li: There is no one trajectory of development
zhlédnutí 2,1KPřed 7 lety
This is the second of two video interviews conducted with Tania Murray-Li during the American Association of Geographers' conference held from April 5-9, 2017 in Boston, USA. Tania Murray Li, Professor of Anthropology, Canada Research Chair in the Political-Economy and Culture of Asia, and Director of the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies, University of Toronto, argues that the transition narr...
Tania Murray Li on rural transformations and political ecology
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 7 lety
This is the first of two video interviews conducted with Tania Murray-Li during the American Association of Geographers' conference held from April 5-9, 2017 in Boston, USA. Tania Murray Li, Professor of Anthropology, Canada Research Chair in the Political-Economy and Culture of Asia, and Director of the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies, University of Toronto, reflects on why and how politica...
Jason W. Moore: Political Ecology or World-Ecology?
zhlédnutí 4,5KPřed 8 lety
Jason W. Moore explains the importance of combining insights from both Political Ecology and World-Ecology. This video interview was conducted by Felipe Milanez and Jonah Wedekind at Entitle's Summer School at Bogazici University, June 2015. www.politicalecology.eu/services/entitle-courses/item/summer-school-on-institutions-justice-democracy. For the other parts of this interview, check: www.en...
Jason W. Moore: The Web of Life
zhlédnutí 4KPřed 8 lety
Jason W. Moore on 'The Web of Life'. This video interview was conducted by Felipe Milanez and Jonah Wedekind at Entitle's Summer School at Bogazici University, June 2015. www.politicalecology.eu/services/entitle-courses/item/summer-school-on-institutions-justice-democracy. For the other parts of this interview, check: www.entitleblog.org
Jason W. Moore: Anthropocene or Capitalocene?
zhlédnutí 26KPřed 8 lety
Jason W. Moore speaks about why the Anthropocene is perhaps better conceptualised as the Capitalocene. This video interview was conducted by Felipe Milanez and Jonah Wedekind at Entitle's Summer School at Bogazici University, June 2015. www.politicalecology.eu/services/entitle-courses/item/summer-school-on-institutions-justice-democracy. For the other parts of this interview, check: www.entitle...
Jason W. Moore: Capital Frontiers
zhlédnutí 1,8KPřed 8 lety
Jason W. Moore speaks about capital and commodities frontiers - and other economic and social frontiers, explaining the importance of frontiers in providing natural resources for the centres of industrial and financial capital. This video interview was conducted by Felipe Milanez and Jonah Wedekind at Entitle's Summer School at Bogazici University, June 2015. www.politicalecology.eu/services/en...
Jason W. Moore: Ontological Politics
zhlédnutí 1,8KPřed 8 lety
Jason W. Moore speaks about Ontological Politics in Political Ecology This video interview was conducted by Felipe Milanez and Jonah Wedekind at Entitle's Summer School at Bogazici University, June 2015. www.politicalecology.eu/services/entitle-courses/item/summer-school-on-institutions-justice-democracy. For the other parts of this interview, check: www.entitleblog.org
Paul Robbins on labor in Political Ecology
zhlédnutí 784Před 9 lety
The political ecologist Paul Robbins, Director of the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, shares his thoughts on labour and Political Ecology. This video is part of an interview of ENTITLE fellows with Paul Robbins, in Barcelona, on January 2015. Read more on ENTITLE network and political ecology at entitleblog.org
Paul Robbins Challenges to Political Ecology
zhlédnutí 2,8KPřed 9 lety
The political ecologist Paul Robbins, Director of the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, shares his thoughts on the challenges to Political Ecology as a critical science. This video is part of an interview of ENTITLE fellows with Paul Robbins, in Barcelona, on January 2015. Read more on ENTITLE network and political ecology at entitleblog.org
Paul Robbins and the Ecology in Political Ecology
zhlédnutí 9KPřed 9 lety
The political ecologist Paul Robbins, Director of the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, shares his thoughts on the ecology in Political Ecology. This video is part of an interview of ENTITLE fellows with Paul Robbins, in Barcelona, on January 2015. Read more on ENTITLE network and political ecology at entitleblog.org
Paul Robbins on the Anthropocene
zhlédnutí 773Před 9 lety
The political ecologist Paul Robbins, Director of the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, shares his thoughts on the Anthropocene. This video is part of an interview of ENTITLE fellows with Paul Robbins, in Barcelona, on January 2015. Read more on ENTITLE network and political ecology at entitleblog.org

Komentáře

  • @davidwatson7604
    @davidwatson7604 Před 5 měsíci

    Algo b-b-boost!

  • @KingKhan-123
    @KingKhan-123 Před 6 měsíci

    Capitalism is founded on the unlimited wants of human beings. But it may not be desirable or in fact be catastrophic because of the technological progress.

  • @aumperialism
    @aumperialism Před 10 měsíci

    We're drenched in technological politics that it's hard to imagine how it looks

  • @charmainecalvino7209
    @charmainecalvino7209 Před 11 měsíci

    well said

  • @AudioPervert1
    @AudioPervert1 Před 2 lety

    He gives a very lucid answer. Yet, this 1450 - 1750 period, is just 400 years of colonial loot & plunder - when humanity since 10,000 BC or earlier has been destroying, colonizing and eradicating species (much of the mega fauna and flora too)

  • @nawaprilwah9980
    @nawaprilwah9980 Před 3 lety

    I don't really understand frontiers here. please could you share your knowledge with me? What is the frontier? How do frontiers function under capitalism? Why does capitalism need frontiers? How does cheap nature relate to frontiers?

    • @javierfrancisco2874
      @javierfrancisco2874 Před 2 lety

      Dear Naw April Wah, in case you're still interested in understanding the connections between frontiers and (proto)capitalism: Beckert, Sven; Bosma, Ulbe; Schneider, Mindi et al. "Commodity frontiers and the transformation of the global countryside: a research agenda", in: Journal of Global History: 2021. Pp. 1-16. --> it's a great, short paper.

  • @NoPrivateProperty
    @NoPrivateProperty Před 3 lety

    Kill them

  • @abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz3010

    Great enthusiasm! I love this dude!

  • @magiaworld1383
    @magiaworld1383 Před 3 lety

    He is so cool 😎

  • @badhoferAUSTRIA
    @badhoferAUSTRIA Před 4 lety

    It all started 2000 years ago That’s when a philosophy came into the world. Three hundred years later, the rulers of the Roman Empire recognized that the subservience of this philosophy made it easier to control their people. On 27 March 380, it was therefore made the state religion. Later this religion would be called Christianity. Symbolic seed capital of their state religion: 1 US-Dollar. . Subservience is also the guarantee that subsequently nobody will dare touching this capital that will be continuously increasing in the future. And Christians have been arming themselves against the unbelievers. Today more than ever before. The unbelievers are also arming themselves, out of self-defense. . And then, the Roman Empire collapsed. But only the Empire collapsed, not the capital of its religion. This capital is preserved. Later it is taken over by the “Holy Roman Empire” that considers itself as the successor of the Roman Empire. However, this Empire also collapsed, while the capital of its religion is preserved. Parts of the Roman Empire as well as the Holy Roman Empire were merged with their religion already before their collapse, and their capital was therefore also preserved in their religion. And over time, it became the largest empire of all times. . How large is the capital of the largest empire of all times today, and who owns it? . capitalocene.com .

    • @coolworx
      @coolworx Před 3 lety

      Your link doesn't know how to do math. $1.9 Trillion divided by 8 billion people is NOT $238 million per person, it's $237.50

    • @তুহিন_জানা
      @তুহিন_জানা Před 3 lety

      "modern" humans have been here for at least 40 thousand years. Philosophy has existed at least as long as that. Christianity was about helping people, forming communes & meeting each others' needs. The Roman state found that a hindrance in keeping people in line & killed Jesus. A few centuries later Roman state co-opted Christianity & mutated it. Just like environmentalism has been co-opted by oil companies.

  • @Val-km5xo
    @Val-km5xo Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the interview

  • @senorton
    @senorton Před 5 lety

    Super clear and helpful--thanks!!

  • @shivanis6526
    @shivanis6526 Před 5 lety

    I really like this video!!!!! I agree completely

  • @reinerwilhelms-tricarico344

    I like this concept “capitalocene” and try to understand it better (reading - with some difficulty - his two recent articles on the subject). I just wonder if this separation of human vs nature wasn’t always present in the ideology of the feudal lords and land lords. They looked at their subjects, in particular the peasants, as some piece of nature that they owned, just like a bunch of work horses. They did not have to put a price on a worker in the sense of wages - the peasants were simply part of the land and had to deliver goods in return for some protection perhaps from rival landlords and marauding soldiers etc. So there wasn’t a concept of value expressed as monetary measure with regards to the subjects. Isn’t it appropriate to think that a value theory and commodification comes when money plays a much bigger role in all relations between people. It looks to me then as if there was always a little bit of that capitalism all along, and only when most processes of transfer of food, materials, and produced goods where accompanied by the exchange and accumulation of money, and that becomes capitalism as we know it.

    • @maelmesplou5972
      @maelmesplou5972 Před 3 lety

      the capitalism is in a way the industralisation of this way of thinking. At the Medieval scale, it wouldn't destroy the environment and the means of production like it does now

    • @boudewijn2003
      @boudewijn2003 Před 2 lety

      Me too!

    • @paulwolinsky1538
      @paulwolinsky1538 Před 2 lety

      Capitalist accumulation and domination not only arrogates nature and "the other" but inscribes its own processes and means "as if" they were themselves a part, the most essential , vital component of the 'Natural' order themselves. This is the mechanism of conservatism (with exceptions) since R. Reagan, until...

  • @altheabetzlyn4206
    @altheabetzlyn4206 Před 6 lety

    I have a assignment base on ontology. Can you help me to explain how ontology relationship in political science?

  • @derekburfoot317
    @derekburfoot317 Před 6 lety

    "new relationships are hard because they require self scrutiny and transform" - great words, sadly all too many lack the courage it requires

  • @Laura-hr7xy
    @Laura-hr7xy Před 6 lety

    Thanks for the video !!

  • @sebster100
    @sebster100 Před 7 lety

    The famous Robbins himself!

  • @ElanaEarthsea
    @ElanaEarthsea Před 7 lety

    Some good points there! Thank you Mr. Robbins