Throughout Appalachia corporations control local economies and absentee ownership of land makes it difficult for communities to protect their waterways, mountains, and forests. Yet among all this uncertainty are committed citizens who have organized themselves to confront both external power holders and often their own local, state, and federal agents. Determined to make their voice heard and to improve their living conditions, newfound partnerships between community activists and faculty and students at community colleges and universities have formed to challenge powerful bureaucratic infrastructures and to protect local ecosystems and communities. Confronting Ecological Crisis: University and Community Partnerships in Appalachia and the South addresses a wide range of cases that have presented challenges to local environments, public health, and social justice faced by the people of this region. Editors Stephanie Mc Spirit, Lynne Faltraco, and Conner Bailey, along with community leaders and their university partners, describe stories of unlikely unions between faculty, students, and Appalachian communities in which both sides learn from one another and, most importantly, form a unique alliance in the fight against corporate control. Confronting Ecological Crisis is a comprehensive look at the citizens and organizations that have emerged to fight the continued destruction of Appalachia.
Innehållsförteckning
Confessions of the Parasitic Researcher to the Man in the Cowboy Hat
What Difference Did it Make?: The Appalachian Land Ownership Study after 25 Years
Participatory Action Research: Combating the Poisoning of Harlan County’s Dayoit
The Martin County Project: A Student, Faculty, and Citizen Effort at Researching the Effects of a Technological Disaster
Unsuitable: The Fight to Save Black Mountain, 1998-1999
Building Partnerships to Challenge Chip Mills: Citizen Activists Find Academic Allies
Environmental Justice from the Roots: Tillery, North Carolina
The Incineration of Chemical Weapons in Anniston, Alabama: The March for Environmental Justice
Expertise and Alliances: How Kentuckians Transformed the U.S. Chemical Weapons Disposal Program
Headwaters: A Student/Faculty Participatory Research Project in an Eastern Kentucky Community
Social Theory, Appalachian Studies and the Challenge of Global Regions: The UK-Rockefeller Fellowship Project, 2000-2004
Om författaren
Conner Bailey is professor of rural sociology at Auburn University and has published in various journals such as Rural Sociology, Society & Natural Resources, Marine Policy, the Journal of Development Studies, and World Development.