Climate Insurgency between Academia and Activism: An Interview with David N. Pellow

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Climate Insurgency between Academia and Activism: An Interview with David N. Pellow. / Armiero, Marco; De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo.

In: Social Text, Vol. 40, No. 150, 2022, p. 157-164.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Armiero, M & De Rosa, SP 2022, 'Climate Insurgency between Academia and Activism: An Interview with David N. Pellow', Social Text, vol. 40, no. 150, pp. 157-164. https://doi.org/10.1215/01642472-9495174

APA

Armiero, M., & De Rosa, S. P. (2022). Climate Insurgency between Academia and Activism: An Interview with David N. Pellow. Social Text, 40(150), 157-164. https://doi.org/10.1215/01642472-9495174

Vancouver

Armiero M, De Rosa SP. Climate Insurgency between Academia and Activism: An Interview with David N. Pellow. Social Text. 2022;40(150):157-164. https://doi.org/10.1215/01642472-9495174

Author

Armiero, Marco ; De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo. / Climate Insurgency between Academia and Activism: An Interview with David N. Pellow. In: Social Text. 2022 ; Vol. 40, No. 150. pp. 157-164.

Bibtex

@article{4662481fa1544780abd41b1987ecf2a2,
title = "Climate Insurgency between Academia and Activism: An Interview with David N. Pellow",
abstract = "This interview focuses on a spectrum of urgent challenges facing marginalized human and other-than-human communities, including the intersecting crises of global anthropogenic climate disruption and state and institutional racist violence. We discuss and consider the opportunities, limits, and contradictions of pursuing transformative, intersectional political change and scholarship through efforts to bridge community activism and academic labor. We also critically engage questions concerning the role of the state in the context of racial capitalism and the production of environmental and climate injustice, and how grassroots movements have responded to these concerns. Specific movement formations included in this discussion include the Central Coast Climate Justice Network of California, the Movement for Black Lives/Black Lives Matter, Extinction Rebellion, and multispecies abolition democracy. The importance of radical, multi-issue politics and cross-movement solidarities is also given serious attention.",
keywords = "environmental justice, climate justice, multispecies, abolition, democracy",
author = "Marco Armiero and {De Rosa}, {Salvatore Paolo}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1215/01642472-9495174",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "157--164",
journal = "Social Text",
issn = "0164-2472",
publisher = "Duke University Press",
number = "150",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Climate Insurgency between Academia and Activism: An Interview with David N. Pellow

AU - Armiero, Marco

AU - De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - This interview focuses on a spectrum of urgent challenges facing marginalized human and other-than-human communities, including the intersecting crises of global anthropogenic climate disruption and state and institutional racist violence. We discuss and consider the opportunities, limits, and contradictions of pursuing transformative, intersectional political change and scholarship through efforts to bridge community activism and academic labor. We also critically engage questions concerning the role of the state in the context of racial capitalism and the production of environmental and climate injustice, and how grassroots movements have responded to these concerns. Specific movement formations included in this discussion include the Central Coast Climate Justice Network of California, the Movement for Black Lives/Black Lives Matter, Extinction Rebellion, and multispecies abolition democracy. The importance of radical, multi-issue politics and cross-movement solidarities is also given serious attention.

AB - This interview focuses on a spectrum of urgent challenges facing marginalized human and other-than-human communities, including the intersecting crises of global anthropogenic climate disruption and state and institutional racist violence. We discuss and consider the opportunities, limits, and contradictions of pursuing transformative, intersectional political change and scholarship through efforts to bridge community activism and academic labor. We also critically engage questions concerning the role of the state in the context of racial capitalism and the production of environmental and climate injustice, and how grassroots movements have responded to these concerns. Specific movement formations included in this discussion include the Central Coast Climate Justice Network of California, the Movement for Black Lives/Black Lives Matter, Extinction Rebellion, and multispecies abolition democracy. The importance of radical, multi-issue politics and cross-movement solidarities is also given serious attention.

KW - environmental justice

KW - climate justice

KW - multispecies

KW - abolition

KW - democracy

U2 - 10.1215/01642472-9495174

DO - 10.1215/01642472-9495174

M3 - Journal article

VL - 40

SP - 157

EP - 164

JO - Social Text

JF - Social Text

SN - 0164-2472

IS - 150

ER -

ID: 362742071