2018
DOI: 10.1080/14747731.2018.1454672
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Working-class ecology and union politics: a conceptual topology

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Cited by 78 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…The proposal was received with irritation in Brindisi, a city already burdened by the cumbersome presence of heavy industries . Reframing the governor’s proposal in the language of the environmental justice movement, one can say that Brindisi had been designated as “sacrifice zone”—an area whose residents are exposed more than others to the environmental risks related to heavy industry, pollution, toxic waste and contamination (Lerner ; see also Barca and Leonardi :493). As a matter of fact, local environmentalist groups, echoing a broader common‐sense discourse, often mobilised the view that the “troubled history” of local industrialisation had made the area a suitable site for plants and infrastructures with severe pollution and other impacts, implying that the area had been sacrificed a long time before.…”
Section: Sacrifice Zonementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The proposal was received with irritation in Brindisi, a city already burdened by the cumbersome presence of heavy industries . Reframing the governor’s proposal in the language of the environmental justice movement, one can say that Brindisi had been designated as “sacrifice zone”—an area whose residents are exposed more than others to the environmental risks related to heavy industry, pollution, toxic waste and contamination (Lerner ; see also Barca and Leonardi :493). As a matter of fact, local environmentalist groups, echoing a broader common‐sense discourse, often mobilised the view that the “troubled history” of local industrialisation had made the area a suitable site for plants and infrastructures with severe pollution and other impacts, implying that the area had been sacrificed a long time before.…”
Section: Sacrifice Zonementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, the framework addresses the plural forms through which the inner logics of capital accumulation can be contested and questioned by valuation practices grounded in the dilemmas of working people regarding their livelihoods and social reproduction. In this respect, my argument is receptive to a long‐standing tradition of labour environmentalism (Barca ; Stevis et al ) and more recent elaborations of a Working‐Class Community Ecology approach, which views working people in industrialised areas as “intrinsically ecological subjects” capable of standing up for projects of socio‐ecological transformation (Barca and Leonardi :489).…”
Section: Grassroots Ecologies Of Valuementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The concomitant ecological, economic and political dimensions of work is generally attributed to labour environmentalism as part of the broader field of environmental labour studies [72][73][74][75]. Labour environmentalism considers work a particular space of tension, domination and resistance concerning the negative environmental and social impacts of industrial capitalism [76,77].…”
Section: Work As a Space For Gaining Social And Environmental Justicementioning
confidence: 99%