• Login
    View Item 
    •   IDA Home
    • Faculty -- Research, Data, Projects, and Papers
    • Collaborative Event Ethnography of Global Conservation Governance
    • Public Resources
    • View Item
    •   IDA Home
    • Faculty -- Research, Data, Projects, and Papers
    • Collaborative Event Ethnography of Global Conservation Governance
    • Public Resources
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Grabbing ‘Green’: Cynical Reason, Instrumental Ethics and the Production of ‘The Green Economy

    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    MacDonald-2013-GrabbingGreen-HumGeo.pdf (206.6Kb)
    Date
    2013
    Author
    Kenneth Iain MacDonald
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    This paper traces the institutionalization of Environmentalism as a pre-condition for the production of ‘The Green Economy,’ particularly the containment of the oppositional possibilities of an environmentalist politics within the institutional and organizational terrain of a transnational managerial and capitalist class. This is a context in which many environmental organizations – once the site of planning, mobilizing and implementing opposition and resistance to the environmentally destructive practices of corporate industrialism – have become part of a new project of accumulation grounded in enclosure, access and the production and exchange of new environmental commodities. This transformation reflects what Sloterdijk (1988) has termed cynical reason – an enlightened false consciousness; and my concern in the paper is to think through ‘The Green Economy’ and its coincident instrumental ethics as an iteration of cynical reason and an expression of institutionalized power. Specifically, I focus on the development of ‘global environmental governance’ as a statist project that concentrates sanctioning authority and resource allocation in centers of accumulation (e.g., the Convention on Biological Diversity and its funding mechanism the Global Environment Facility) and facilitates the containment of Environmentalism as an oppositional politics through demands that it assume conventional forms of organization, projectification and professionalisation and through facilitating a redefinition and redeployment that shifts environmentalism from a space of hope to an instrumentalist mechanism in rationalist projects of accumulation.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10166/6015
    Collections
    • Public Resources

    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
    Contact Us | Send Feedback | MHC Accessibility Barriers Form
    Theme by 
    @mire NV
     

     

    Browse

    All of IDACommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

    My Account

    LoginRegister

    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
    Contact Us | Send Feedback | MHC Accessibility Barriers Form
    Theme by 
    @mire NV