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- Politics and Resistance of Coal in Australia and India
This book shows differences and similarities in the political economy of coal and creates understanding about the significantly different imperatives and narratives of anti-coal environmentalism, in Australia and India
- Politics and resistance of coal in Australia and India climate justice . . .
The book focuses on two iconic movements: the Stop Adani campaign in Australia, aimed at preventing the construction of the Carmichael coal mine in Queensland, and the grassroots resistance in India, spearheaded by Greenpeace and local communities, against the Mahan coal mine in Madhya Pradesh
- Politics and Resistance of Coal in Australia and India: Climate Justice . . .
This book provides an in-depth, ethnography-based comparison of environmentalism in the global North and South through movement case studies situated in Australia and India
- Politics and Resistance of Coal in Australia and India: Climate Justice . . .
"This book provides an in-depth, ethnography-based comparison of environmentalism in the global North and South through movement case studies situated in Australia and India
- Politics and Resistance of Coal in Australia and India 1st edition . . .
Politics and Resistance of Coal in Australia and India: Climate Justice Activism in the Global North and South 1st Edition is written by Ruchira Talukdar and published by Routledge
- Politics and resistance of coal in Australia and India : climate . . .
"This book provides an in-depth, ethnography-based comparison of environmentalism in the global North and South through movement case studies situated in Australia and India
- Politics and Resistance of Coal in Australia and India | Bookshare
This book shows differences and similarities in the political economy of coal and creates understanding about the significantly different imperatives and narratives of anti-coal environmentalism, in Australia and India
- Epilogue | 10 | Politics and Resistance of Coal in Australia and India
As I write the postscript in the simmering South Asian summer of 2024, looking at the period in Australian and Indian politics on coal that I researched – between 2011 and 2018 – from hindsight makes apparent two contrasting realities
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