815 research outputs found
Dewzrost: Słownik Nowej Ery
Dewzrost jest odrzuceniem iluzji wzrostu i wezwaniem do odpolitycznienia publicznej debaty skolonizowanej przez język ekonomii. Jest to projekt popierający demokratycznie wprowadzone ograniczenie produkcji i konsumpcji w celu osiągnięcia sprawiedliwości społecznej oraz zrównoważonego rozwoju. Książka oferuje obszerne, ale zwięzłe i przystępnie napisane omówienie głównych tematów i wyzwań związanych z ideą dewzrostu. Ponadto zawiera zestaw słów kluczowych przydatnych w bieżących debatach politycznych – inspirując rozwiązania na różnych poziomach: lokalnych, krajowych i globalnych. Jest to najbardziej wszechstronne omówienie tematu dewzrostu dostępne w języku angielskim, dzięki czemu może służyć jako punkt odniesienia w międzynarodowych dyskusjach na ten temat. Redaktorami tomu są związani z Uniwersytetem Autonomicznym w Barcelonie (Hiszpania): Giacomo D’Alisa, Federico Demaria oraz Giorgos Kallis. Wszyscy trzej są członkami „Research & Degrowth”, www.degrowth.org
The New Narrative Form of Post-conflicts: New Wars as World-Wide War
Within the human sciences, as in the ever-growing field of memory and trauma studies, works on memories and post-memories of conflicts have been numerous. They have explored the ways in which the representation of individual and collective memories are closely linked to the building and rebuilding of national and transnational, local and diasporic cultures. Yet, even within such studies, rarely has the category of post-conflict been associated directly with that of culture, that is to an interpretation of conflicts, collective violence and wars, centred on the disruption of symbolic systems of cultural reproduction. This cultural dimension is what the Studies in Post-Conflict Cultures series has dedicated itself to. This landmark anthology offers a generous selection from its ten volumes so far published
Ashish Kothari, Ariel Salleh, Arturo Escobar, Federico Demaria, Alberto Acosta, eds, Pluriverso: Dizionario del Post-Sviluppo, edizione italiana a cura di Maura Benegiamo, Alice Dal Gobbo, Emanuele Leonardi, Salvo Torre, Pisa, Orthotes, 2021, pp. 491
Book review of Ashish Kothari, Ariel Salleh, Arturo Escobar, Federico Demaria, Alberto Acosta, eds, Pluriverso: Dizionario del Post-Sviluppo, Italian edition edited by Maura Benegiamo, Alice Dal Gobbo, Emanuele Leonardi, Salvo Torre, Pisa, Orthotes, 2021, pp. 491.Recensione di Ashish Kothari, Ariel Salleh, Arturo Escobar, Federico Demaria, Alberto Acosta, eds, Pluriverso: Dizionario del Post-Sviluppo, edizione italiana a cura di Maura Benegiamo, Alice Dal Gobbo, Emanuele Leonardi, Salvo Torre, Pisa, Orthotes, 2021, pp. 491
Correction to: Ecological distribution conflicts as forces for sustainability: an overview and conceptual framework
The article Ecological distribution conflicts as forces for sustainability: an overview and conceptual framework, written by Arnim Scheidel, Leah Temper, Federico Demaria and Joan Martínez‑Alier was originally published electronically on the publisher’s internet portal (currently SpringerLink) on 13 December 2017 without open access.
With the author(s)’ decision to opt for Open Choice the
copyright of the article changed on 13 December 2017 to ©
The Author(s) 2017 and the article is forthwith distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/
by/4.0/), which permits use, duplication, adaptation, distribution
and reproduction in any medium or format, as long
as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and
the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license
and indicate if changes were made.
The original article was corrected
ΑΝΤΙΩΦΕΛΙΜΙΣΜΟΣ
Anti-utilitarianism is a school of thought that critiques the hegemony of the epistemological postulates of economics in the humanities and social sciences. Anti-utilitarians assert the crucial importance of the social bond when compared to self-interest. They outline a gift exchange paradigm that aims to overstep two major frameworks of the social sciences: holism and methodological individualism. In 1981, the French sociologist, Alain Caillé, and the Swiss anthropologist, Gérald Berthoud, gave birth to MAUSS – Mouvement anti-utilitariste dans les sciences sociales (Anti-utilitarian Movement
in the Social Sciences). This brilliant acronym reproduces the surname of the author of The Gift (1924), Marcel Mauss. Most anti-utilitarians reproach Latouche for the choice of the term “degrowth”: it implicitly embeds the alternative into the economic imaginary. They call, instead, for a “political” critique of boundlessness and excess, uprooting the discourse from an ethical level
- …
