| Preface |
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xi | |
| 1 Introduction |
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1 | (18) |
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1 | (7) |
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1.2 Aims and Method: Critical Political Ecology |
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8 | (3) |
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1.3 Working toward the Green State: A Provisional Starting Point |
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11 | (2) |
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1.4 Three Core Challenges |
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13 | (6) |
| 2 The State and Global Anarchy |
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19 | (34) |
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2.1 Environmental Realpolitiks and the Tragedy of the Commons |
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19 | (9) |
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2.2 Neoliberalism, Environmental Regimes, and the Limits of Problem Solving |
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28 | (5) |
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2.3 Critical Constructivism and Social Learning |
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33 | (20) |
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2.3.1 Not One but Many "Cultures of Anarchy" |
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43 | (5) |
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2.3.2 Toward Structural Transformation? |
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48 | (5) |
| 3 The State and Global Capitalism |
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53 | (32) |
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3.1 The Decline of the State? |
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53 | (1) |
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3.2 Eco-Marxism, the Welfare State, and Legitimation Crisis |
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54 | (11) |
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3.3 From the Welfare State to the Competition State |
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65 | (5) |
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3.4 Ecological Modernization: Just a New Competitive Strategy? |
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70 | (9) |
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3.5 Globalization, Sustainability, and the State |
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79 | (6) |
| 4 The Limits of the Liberal Democratic State |
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85 | (26) |
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4.1 The Liberal Democratic State: Not Reflexive Enough? |
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85 | (3) |
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4.2 The Ecological Critique of the Administrative State |
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88 | (5) |
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4.3 The Ecological Critique of Liberal Democracy |
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93 | (11) |
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4.4 An Immanent Ecological Critique of Liberal Dogmas |
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104 | (7) |
| 5 From Liberal to Ecological Democracy |
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111 | (28) |
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5.1 Ecological Democracy: An Ambit Claim |
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111 | (4) |
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5.2 The Intuitive Green Appeal of Deliberative Democracy |
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115 | (4) |
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5.3 Representing "Excluded Others": The Moral and Epistemological Challenges |
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119 | (8) |
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5.4 Representing "Excluded Others": The Political and Institutional Challenges |
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127 | (12) |
| 6 The Greening of the Democratic State |
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139 | (32) |
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6.1 From Ecological Democracy to the Green Democratic State |
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139 | (3) |
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6.2 The State, Civil Society, and the Public Sphere |
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142 | (8) |
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6.3 A Green Critique and Reconstruction of the Habermasian Democratic State |
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150 | (21) |
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6.3.1 Realizing the Potential of the Public Sphere |
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153 | (11) |
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6.3.2 From Pragmatic to Moral Deliberation (and Back Again) |
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164 | (7) |
| 7 Cosmopolitan Democracy versus the Transnational State |
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171 | (32) |
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7.1 Principles of Democratic Governance: Belongingness versus Affectedness |
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171 | (8) |
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7.2 Communitarian or Cosmopolitan Democracy |
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179 | (11) |
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7.3 The Transnational State as a Facilitator of Ecological Citizenship |
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190 | (8) |
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7.4 Unit-Driven Transformation and the Power of Example |
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198 | (5) |
| 8 Green Evolutions in Sovereignty |
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203 | (38) |
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8.1 Green Evolutions in Sovereignty |
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203 | (8) |
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8.2 New Developments in Global Environmental Law and Policy |
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211 | (17) |
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8.2.1 Environmental Multilateralism: General Developments |
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211 | (6) |
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8.2.2 State Responsibility for Environmental Harm |
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217 | (4) |
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8.2.3 The Right to Develop: Economic versus Environmental Justice? |
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221 | (3) |
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8.2.4 Ecological Security and New Norms of Intervention? |
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224 | (4) |
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8.3 Ecological Harm, Nonintervention, and Ecologically Responsible Statehood |
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228 | (13) |
| Conclusion: Sovereignty and Democracy Working Together |
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241 | (14) |
| Notes |
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255 | (42) |
| Bibliography |
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297 | (20) |
| Index |
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317 | |