Description
About the Author
Karen Bell is a Research Associate at the Centre for the Study of Poverty and Social Justice at the School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol. Her research and teaching interests include the social impacts of environmental policy; participatory democracy; race, class and disability equality; and natural health care. She was formerly a community development worker for many years, working alongside disadvantaged communities to collectively address a range of social and environmental issues.
Reviews
"The range of this book is both breathtaking and unique. Karen Bell analyses data from seven very different countries, and points an unerring finger at capitalism as the principal cause of environmental injustice. If ever there was a fundamental point of reference, this is it." Andrew Dobson, Professor of Politics, Keele University, UK
"A revealing snapshot of current local and global environmental justice issues in a variety of countries, a valuable contribution to what Gordon Walker called the "international travelling of the environmental justice frame." LSE Review of Books blog
"Achieving Environmental Justice is an important read for anyone wishing to develop a more critical analysis of the anti-ecological logic of global capitalism and the need for EJ movements around the world to embrace a politics of substantive environmental justice." Dr. Daniel Faber, Director of the Northeastern Environmental Justice Research Collaborative, Northeastern University, US
"From Bolivia to the US, Karen Bell provides an impressive tour de force of the struggles of environmental justice movements." Professor Peter Newell, Director of the Centre for Global Political Economy, University of Sussex, UK
Book Information
ISBN 9781447305941
Author Karen Bell
Format Hardback
Page Count 320
Imprint Policy Press
Publisher Bristol University Press