Occupy Climate Change! An Introduction
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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Occupy Climate Change! An Introduction. / De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo; Armiero, Marco; Turhan, Ethemcan.
Urban Movements and Climate Change: Loss, Damage and Radical Adaptation. Amsterdam University Press, 2024.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Occupy Climate Change! An Introduction
AU - De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo
AU - Armiero, Marco
AU - Turhan, Ethemcan
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - This introduction presents the Occupy Climate Change! research project, the root from which this volume has sprouted. Armiero, De Rosa and Turhan discuss the main themes addressed by the project and the contribu-tors to the volume: the (counter-)power of community led experiments, the trap of the mainstream climate change discourses and policies, and the need to repoliticizing climate adaptation and mitigation. Facing loss and damage now and not in a remote future, communities are experimenting with a wide variety of social innovations, often deeply antagonistic to top-down approaches, sometimes more inclined towards collaborations with institutions. This introduction attempts to systematize the characteristics of social innovations vs. market innovations, though, avoiding to propose any f ixed canon to evaluate grassroots experiments.
AB - This introduction presents the Occupy Climate Change! research project, the root from which this volume has sprouted. Armiero, De Rosa and Turhan discuss the main themes addressed by the project and the contribu-tors to the volume: the (counter-)power of community led experiments, the trap of the mainstream climate change discourses and policies, and the need to repoliticizing climate adaptation and mitigation. Facing loss and damage now and not in a remote future, communities are experimenting with a wide variety of social innovations, often deeply antagonistic to top-down approaches, sometimes more inclined towards collaborations with institutions. This introduction attempts to systematize the characteristics of social innovations vs. market innovations, though, avoiding to propose any f ixed canon to evaluate grassroots experiments.
M3 - Book chapter
BT - Urban Movements and Climate Change
PB - Amsterdam University Press
ER -
ID: 378758454