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This System is Killing Us: Land Grabbing, the Green Economy and Ecological Conflict

Current price: $22.95
This System is Killing Us: Land Grabbing, the Green Economy and Ecological Conflict
This System is Killing Us: Land Grabbing, the Green Economy and Ecological Conflict

Barnes and Noble

This System is Killing Us: Land Grabbing, the Green Economy and Ecological Conflict

Current price: $22.95

Size: Paperback

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“Dunlap is one of the foremost researchers on the unfolding
relationship between ecocide, colonialism, extractivism, and green capitalism. ... An important book”
Peter Gelderloos, author of
The Solutions are Already Here
“Vital for understanding the forces driving violence against land
and water defenders around the world”
Alleen Brown, investigative journalist
“A passionate account of the harms of green capitalism”
Professor Anna Feigenbaum, author of
Tear Gas
“One of the most compelling, demystifying, and provocative
calls to action in the face of the violent collapse of modernity.
A must-read”
Dr. Carlos Tornel, author of
Gustavo Esteva
This System is Killing Us
is an insider look at the catastrophic effects that energy infrastructure and mining are having on communities and our planet. Xander Dunlap spent a decade living and working with Indigenous activists and land defenders across the world to uncover evidence of the repression people have faced in the wake of untamed capitalist growth.
By centring the struggles of people whose lives are being systematically destroyed, Dunlap reveals gaps within the current official debates around climate change. This includes reviewing feuds between socialist modernism and degrowth. While changing public policy could play a constructive role in remediating climate catastrophe, by understanding the successes and failures of those “on the front lines”, it becomes clear that ecologically decentralized self-organization could be the only way out of this environmental nightmare.
Xander Dunlap
is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute for Global Sustainability, Boston University, USA, and a visiting research fellow in the Global Development Studies Department, University of Helsinki, Finland. Xander has written many books, most recently
Enforcing Ecocide
, and is a long-time participant in anti-police, squatting and environmental movements.

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