Disobey, block, organize: The politics and strategies of grassroots climate activism in Malmö and Sweden

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Disobey, block, organize : The politics and strategies of grassroots climate activism in Malmö and Sweden. / De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo.

Urban Movements and Climate Change: Loss, Damage and Radical Adaptation. Amsterdam University Press, 2024.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

De Rosa, SP 2024, Disobey, block, organize: The politics and strategies of grassroots climate activism in Malmö and Sweden. in Urban Movements and Climate Change: Loss, Damage and Radical Adaptation. Amsterdam University Press. <https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/86231>

APA

De Rosa, S. P. (2024). Disobey, block, organize: The politics and strategies of grassroots climate activism in Malmö and Sweden. In Urban Movements and Climate Change: Loss, Damage and Radical Adaptation Amsterdam University Press. https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/86231

Vancouver

De Rosa SP. Disobey, block, organize: The politics and strategies of grassroots climate activism in Malmö and Sweden. In Urban Movements and Climate Change: Loss, Damage and Radical Adaptation. Amsterdam University Press. 2024

Author

De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo. / Disobey, block, organize : The politics and strategies of grassroots climate activism in Malmö and Sweden. Urban Movements and Climate Change: Loss, Damage and Radical Adaptation. Amsterdam University Press, 2024.

Bibtex

@inbook{b7547b1586f74ac1bbd6ce8ff0b6cb67,
title = "Disobey, block, organize: The politics and strategies of grassroots climate activism in Malm{\"o} and Sweden",
abstract = "This chapter moves from a characterization of top-down, technocratic and market-oriented interventions in climate governance by state and corporations as hegemonic forces of depoliticization. Such a consensual regime of climate change governance leaves untouched the power of capital, the rule of the market and the global imperial hierarchies underpinning both. The chapter brings forth the contestations to this state of af fairs by climate activists and grassroots mobilizations. By focusing on the tension between consensus and dissent, De Rosa analyses the strategies through which three activist groups repoliticize the climate in the context of Sweden{\textquoteright}s and Malm{\"o}{\textquoteright}s climate governance, detailing how they challenge the socio-ecological dominant order and how they contribute to the articulation of counter-hegemonic relations across scales.",
author = "{De Rosa}, {Salvatore Paolo}",
year = "2024",
language = "English",
booktitle = "Urban Movements and Climate Change",
publisher = "Amsterdam University Press",
address = "Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Disobey, block, organize

T2 - The politics and strategies of grassroots climate activism in Malmö and Sweden

AU - De Rosa, Salvatore Paolo

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - This chapter moves from a characterization of top-down, technocratic and market-oriented interventions in climate governance by state and corporations as hegemonic forces of depoliticization. Such a consensual regime of climate change governance leaves untouched the power of capital, the rule of the market and the global imperial hierarchies underpinning both. The chapter brings forth the contestations to this state of af fairs by climate activists and grassroots mobilizations. By focusing on the tension between consensus and dissent, De Rosa analyses the strategies through which three activist groups repoliticize the climate in the context of Sweden’s and Malmö’s climate governance, detailing how they challenge the socio-ecological dominant order and how they contribute to the articulation of counter-hegemonic relations across scales.

AB - This chapter moves from a characterization of top-down, technocratic and market-oriented interventions in climate governance by state and corporations as hegemonic forces of depoliticization. Such a consensual regime of climate change governance leaves untouched the power of capital, the rule of the market and the global imperial hierarchies underpinning both. The chapter brings forth the contestations to this state of af fairs by climate activists and grassroots mobilizations. By focusing on the tension between consensus and dissent, De Rosa analyses the strategies through which three activist groups repoliticize the climate in the context of Sweden’s and Malmö’s climate governance, detailing how they challenge the socio-ecological dominant order and how they contribute to the articulation of counter-hegemonic relations across scales.

M3 - Book chapter

BT - Urban Movements and Climate Change

PB - Amsterdam University Press

ER -

ID: 378758516