Part One: Justice in Theory and Practice
1. Defining Environmental Justice
2. Distribution and Beyond: Conceptions Of Justice In Contemporary
Theory And Practice
Part Two: Movement Definitions of Environmental Justice
3. Defining Environmental Justice in the United States
4. Environmental Justice and Global Movements
Part Three: Doing Justice to Nature
5. Justice to Nature 1: Distributive Approaches
6. Justice to Nature 2: Incorporating Recognition, Capabilities,
and Participation
Part Four: Plurality, Reflexivity, and Engagement
7. Justice and Plurality
8. Ecological Reflexivity, Engagement, and Institutions:
Implementing Environmental and Ecological Justice
"David Schlosber's Defining Environmental Justice is political theory at its best, providing an invaluable review of the contemporary literature, subverting traditional political categories and distinctions, and suggesting new directions for politics and policy... "efining Environmental Justice breaks important ground not only in advancing political theory's engagement with nature but in crafting a theoretical and political framework that draws together moral consideration for nonhuman nature with environmental justice concerns... [Schlosberg] offers a powerful critique of liberal theories of justice and their often singular focus on distribution, offering a more inclusive notion of justice that embraces recognition, capabilities, and participatory democracy."--Ethics & International Affiars
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