This book unravels the profound implications of biodiversity offsetting for nature-society relationships and its links to environmental and social inequality. Drawing on people’s resistance against its implementation in several urban and rural places across England, it explores how the production of equivalent natures, the core promise of offsetting, reframes socionatures both discursively and materially transforming places and livelihoods.
The book draws on theories and concepts from human geography, political ecology, and Marxist political economy, and aims to shift the trajectory of the current literature on the interplay between offsetting, urbanization and the neoliberal reconstruction of conservation and planning policies in the era following the 2008 financial crash. By shedding light on offsetting’s contested geographies, it offers a fundamental retheorization of offsetting capable of demonstrating how offsetting, and more broadly revanchist neoliberal policies, are increasingly used to support capitalist urban growth producing socially, environmentally and geographically uneven outcomes.
Nature Swapped and Nature Lost brings forward an understanding of environmental politics as class politics and sees environmental justice as inextricably linked to social justice. It effectively challenges the dystopia of offsetting’s ahistorical and asocial non-places and proposes a radically different pathway for gaining social control over the production of nature by linking struggles for the right to the city with struggles for the right to nature for all.
Inhoudsopgave
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Neoliberal Natures and Biodiversity Offsetting.- Chapter 3. Biodiversity Offsetting and Equivalent Natures.- Chapter 4. Value or Rent? A marxist analysis of Biodiversity Offsetting.- Chapter 5. Biodiversity offsetting and the restructuring of conservation in England: Deepening the neoliberal production of socionatures.- Chapter 6. Biodiversity Offsetting, urbanization and the neoliberalization of nature and space in post-crisis England.- Chapter 7: Discussing with the supporters and the opponents of biodiversity offsetting.- Chapter 8. Afterword.
Over de auteur
Elia Apostolopoulou is a senior research fellow at the University of Cambridge, UK and a visiting research fellow at Harokopio University of Athens, Greece. While writing a significant part of this book she was a lecturer at the Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, UK. She is also co-editor of
The Right to Nature: Social Movements, Environmental Justice and Neoliberal Natures (2019).