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Capitalism, Colonisation, and the Ecocide-Genocide Nexus: Title Page

Capitalism, Colonisation, and the Ecocide-Genocide Nexus
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table of contents
  1. Series Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgements
  6. List of abbreviations
  7. 1. Introduction: ecological inequity, ‘exterminism’ and genocide
    1. The genocide – ecocide nexus
    2. A synthesis of the sociology of genocide and environmental sociology
    3. Governmentality, colonial discourses and the constitutive logic of race
    4. The case of Kenya and Australia as sites of continuing genocide: the logic of comparison
    5. Methodological considerations
    6. Chapter outlines
  8. 2. Australia then: the architecture of dispossession
    1. Australian society on the cusp of colonisation
    2. The rosy dawn of relations of genocide
    3. Indigenous peoples for itself
    4. The rise of the mineocracy
    5. Beware of genocidaires bearing gifts: the phase of recognition
  9. 3. Australia now: the architecture of dispossession
    1. The extractivist mode of production in Australia today
    2. Wangan and Jagalingou Traditional Owners Council versus the mineocracy
    3. The Githabul and Gomeroi in gasland
    4. Resistance to the relations of genocide
  10. 4. Kenya then: the architecture of dispossession
    1. Kenyan societies on the cusp of colonisation
    2. The genesis of relations of genocide
    3. Architectures of dispossession then: land and labour
    4. Architecture of dispossession then: racialised geographies and the cheapening of black bodies
    5. The legacy of colonisation, ‘decolonisation’ and decoloniality
    6. The political economic inheritance
    7. Developmentalism and the ‘black man’s burden’
    8. Colonial lawfare
  11. 5. Kenya now: the architecture of dispossession
    1. The Sengwer as obstacle to conservation
    2. Greenwashed relations of genocide
    3. The political economy of ecologically induced genocide today
    4. The conservationist mode of production: green accumulation by dispossession
    5. Neoliberal globalisation and the commodification of nature as a vector of genocide
    6. Development ideology, green governmentality and racialised ecologies
    7. Resistance to relations of genocide
  12. Conclusion: a neo-Lemkian ontology in the age of the Anthropocene
  13. Bibliography
  14. Index

Capitalism, Colonisation, and the Ecocide-Genocide Nexus

Martin Crook

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© Martin Crook 2024
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