Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ecogovernmentality> ?p ?o }
- Ecogovernmentality abstract "Ecogovernmentality, (or environmentality), is the application of Foucault’s concepts of biopower and governmentality to the analysis of the regulation of social interactions with the natural world. The concept of Ecogovernmentality expands on Foucault’s genealogical examination of the state to include ecological rationalities and technologies of government (Malette, 2009). Begun in the mid-1990s by a small body of theorists (Luke, Darier, and Rutherford) the literature on ecogovernmentality grew as a response to the perceived lack of Foucauldian analysis of environmentalism and in environmental studies.Following Michel Foucault, writing on ecogovernmentality focuses on how government agencies, in combination with producers of expert knowledge, construct “The Environment.” This construction is viewed both in terms of the creation of an object of knowledge and a sphere within which certain types of intervention and management are created and deployed to further the government’s larger aim of managing the lives of its constituents. This governmental management is dependent on the dissemination and internalization of knowledge/power among individual actors. This creates a decentered network of self-regulating elements whose interests become integrated with those of the State.Ecogovernmentality is part of the broader area of political ecology. It can be situated within the ongoing debates over how to balance concern with socio-natural relationships with attention to the actual environmental impact of specific interactions. The term is most useful to authors like Bryant, Watts and Peet who argue for the importance of a phenomenology of nature that builds from post-structuralist concerns with knowledge, power and discourse. In addition, it is of particular use to geographers because of its ability to link place based socio-environmental phenomena with the non-place based influences of both national and international systems of governance. Particularly, for studies of environmental changes that extend beyond the borders one particular region, ecogovernmentality can prove a useful analytical tool for tracing the manifestations of specific policy across scales ranging from the individual, the community, the state and on to larger structures of international environmental governance.".
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageExternalLink 3686.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageID "15225843".
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageLength "23436".
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageOutDegree "93".
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageRevisionID "660986435".
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink 1973_oil_crisis.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Adaptation_to_global_warming.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink An_Inconvenient_Truth.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Behavior.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Biodiversity.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Biological_classification.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Biopower.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Border.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Carbon_emission_trading.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Carbon_market.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Cartography.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Category:Climate_change.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Category:Environmental_social_science_concepts.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Category:Forest_governance.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Category:Michel_Foucault.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_ecology.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_philosophy.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Climate_change.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Climate_change_adaptation.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Climate_change_mitigation.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Climate_change_modeling.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Climate_change_policy.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Climate_governance.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Climate_model.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Commodification.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Communication.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Communications.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Community.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Competition.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Conscription.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Conservation_movement.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Consumerism.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Crop.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Discipline.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Divergence.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Early_modern_Europe.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Earth_Summit.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Ecology.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_factor.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_factors.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_governance.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_impact_assessment.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_studies.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Environmentalism.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Forestry.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Formulation.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Geography.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Government_agencies.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Government_agency.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Governmentality.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Harvest.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Human_development_(humanity).
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Human_geography.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Insanity.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Insurance.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Insurance_industry.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Intergovernmental_organization.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Internalization.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink International_relations.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Interventionism_(politics).
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Kyoto_Protocol.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Macro-economics.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Macroeconomics.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Marketing.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Media_coverage_of_climate_change.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Michel_Foucault.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Military_conflict.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Mineral_composition.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Nation.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Natural_resource.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Nature.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Neoliberal.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Neoliberalism.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Non_state_actors_in_environmental_law.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Nonprofit_organization.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Nonprofit_organizations.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Normalization_(sociology).
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Organism.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Organisms.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Phenomenology_(philosophy).
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Political_ecology.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Politics_of_global_warming.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Pollution.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Population.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Post-structuralism.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Post-structuralist.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Regulation.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Resource_extraction.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Resource_management.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Sanity.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Social_relation.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Social_vulnerability.
- Ecogovernmentality wikiPageWikiLink Socio-economic_management.