TY - JOUR
T1 - Ecological Crises and Ecopolitics Research in Australia
AU - McDonald, Matt
AU - Park, Susan
AU - Anantharajah, Kirsty
AU - Burke, Anthony
AU - Celermajer, Danielle
AU - Evans, Megan C.
AU - Eckersley, Robyn
AU - Gulliver, Robyn
AU - McNaught, Rebecca
AU - Morgan, Wesley
AU - Ruwet, Melodie
AU - Symons, Jonathan
AU - Schlosberg, David
AU - Vogler, Anselm
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank the Australian Political Studies Association for funding an Ecopolitics workshop at the University of Queensland in November 2022 on which this paper is based. Thanks too to other contributors to the workshop.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Australian Journal of Politics & History published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.
PY - 2024/8
Y1 - 2024/8
N2 - It is difficult to exaggerate the scale of contemporary ecological crises. These challenges, particularly climate change, necessitate new modes of politics and policy, even potentially new institutions, that seem anathema to the emphases of traditional accounts of environmental political science. In this paper, we explore contemporary ecopolitics research in Australia that is attempting to come to terms with the reality of ecological crises and the geological epoch of the Anthropocene. Showcasing a range of scholarship in this area, we argue that contemporary Australian ecopolitics research identifies and engages with a wide range of sites of politics and a significant number of (consequential) political actors. It recognises the need to engage directly with key institutions while also extending our gaze to the environment movement, community groups, financial institutions, local governments, and consumers. It acknowledges that sites of politics extend from the way ecological crises are framed in public debate to policy management, practices of private corporations and even to individual patterns of consumption. And it argues for an expansive conception of ethics beyond currently living human communities, a vision which arguably better meets the reality of ecological crises and the Anthropocene epoch.
AB - It is difficult to exaggerate the scale of contemporary ecological crises. These challenges, particularly climate change, necessitate new modes of politics and policy, even potentially new institutions, that seem anathema to the emphases of traditional accounts of environmental political science. In this paper, we explore contemporary ecopolitics research in Australia that is attempting to come to terms with the reality of ecological crises and the geological epoch of the Anthropocene. Showcasing a range of scholarship in this area, we argue that contemporary Australian ecopolitics research identifies and engages with a wide range of sites of politics and a significant number of (consequential) political actors. It recognises the need to engage directly with key institutions while also extending our gaze to the environment movement, community groups, financial institutions, local governments, and consumers. It acknowledges that sites of politics extend from the way ecological crises are framed in public debate to policy management, practices of private corporations and even to individual patterns of consumption. And it argues for an expansive conception of ethics beyond currently living human communities, a vision which arguably better meets the reality of ecological crises and the Anthropocene epoch.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85201061501&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/ajph.13016
DO - 10.1111/ajph.13016
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85201061501
SN - 0004-9522
SP - 1
EP - 19
JO - Australian Journal of Politics and History
JF - Australian Journal of Politics and History
ER -