2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.polgeo.2017.09.006
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Vulnerability after “the end of famine”: Political ecology, development, and deconcentrated starvation

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“…It is linked to the ‘ecology’, inequality and the agency of ideas and the actions of social, economic and discursive power across scales (Kull et al ., ; Harris, ). According to Watts (: 257), political ecology attempts to
understand the complex relations between nature and society through a careful analysis of what might call the forms of access and control over resources and their implications for environmental health and sustainable livelihoods.
Apart from exploring the dialectical nature–society linkages through an analysis of the political economy of environmental change (Robbins, ; Fogelman, ), political ecology critically explains what is wrong with dominant accounts of environmental change, while exploring alternatives, adaptations in the face of mismanagement and exploitation. Scott and Sullivan () identified two key themes of political ecology, involving the discourses associated with the examination of environment and power relationships shaped by these discourses (Arnall, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It is linked to the ‘ecology’, inequality and the agency of ideas and the actions of social, economic and discursive power across scales (Kull et al ., ; Harris, ). According to Watts (: 257), political ecology attempts to
understand the complex relations between nature and society through a careful analysis of what might call the forms of access and control over resources and their implications for environmental health and sustainable livelihoods.
Apart from exploring the dialectical nature–society linkages through an analysis of the political economy of environmental change (Robbins, ; Fogelman, ), political ecology critically explains what is wrong with dominant accounts of environmental change, while exploring alternatives, adaptations in the face of mismanagement and exploitation. Scott and Sullivan () identified two key themes of political ecology, involving the discourses associated with the examination of environment and power relationships shaped by these discourses (Arnall, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Apart from exploring the dialectical nature-society linkages through an analysis of the political economy of environmental change (Robbins, 2012;Fogelman, 2018), political ecology critically explains what is wrong with dominant accounts of environmental change, while exploring alternatives, adaptations in the face of mismanagement and exploitation. Scott and Sullivan (2000) identified two key themes of political ecology, involving the discourses associated with the examination of environment and power relationships shaped by these discourses (Arnall, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%