This article inquires into how contemporary populist radical right parties relate to environmental issues of countryside and climate protection, by analyzing relevant discourses of the British National Party (BNP) and the Danish People's Party (DPP). It does so by looking at party materials along three dimensions: the aesthetic, the symbolic, and the material. The article discusses to what extent the parties' political stances on environmental issues are conditioned by deeper structures of nationalist ideology and the understandings of nature embedded therein. It illustrates a fundamental difference between the way nationalist actors engage in, on the one hand, the protection of nature as national countryside and landscape, epitomizing the nation's beauty, harmony and purity over which the people are sovereign. On the other hand, they deny or cast doubt on environmental risks located at a transnational level, such as those that relate to climate. The article argues that this apparent inconsistency is rooted in the ideological tenets of nationalism as the transnational undermines the nationalist ideal of sovereignty.
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The Nature of Nationalism: Populist Radical Right Parties on Countryside and Climate
Bernhard Forchtner and Christoffer Kølvraa
Iranian Environmentalism: Nationhood, Alternative Natures, and the Materiality of Objects
Satoshi Abe
In addressing mounting environmental problems in recent years, many Iranian environmentalists have increasingly adapted discourses and implemented programs that are modeled on scientific ecology. Does this mean the verbatim transfer of Western scientific modernity in Iran? My analyses suggest otherwise. This article explores the unique ways in which a burgeoning environmental awareness unfolds in Iranian contexts by investigating how conceptions of "nature" shape the environmentalists' discourses and practices. It appears that an ecological scientific conception of nature is becoming an important frame of reference among such environmentalists. However, another conception of nature-one framed in relation to Iranian nationhood-makes a key contribution to environmentalism in Iran. Drawing on fieldwork conducted in 2009-2011 in Tehran, this study demonstrates how "Iranian nature" is delineated and practiced through the environmentalists' (re)engagements with certain objects-maps, posters, and photographs-in relation to which local ways of conceptualizing nature are elaborated.
Daoist Political Ecology as Green Party Ideology
The Case of the Swedish Greens
Devin K. Joshi
envision to be the relatively peaceful, harmonious, and nurturing character of nature ( Liu 2011 ). Such deviant actions include destructive and harmful behaviors like fighting wars, military conscription, aggressive nationalism, excessive taxation
The Political Economy of Water in the Past, Present, and Future
John Sonnett
-based problems of water management: Egypt’s nationalism overrode concerns about possible impacts of the Aswan Dam, which now blocks vital silt from reaching the Lower Nile Valley; Saudi Arabia has unwisely invested its oil money into profligate use of water
The Role of Naturalness in Ecological Restoration
A Case Study from the Cook County Forest Preserves
Nicole M. Evans and William P. Stewart
natural selection for fitness for thousands of years. It is fitting and it belongs. To destroy it is to destroy the real America” ( J. Jensen 1927 ). Jensen quite explicitly linked naturalness, divine design, and nationalism to make the case for native
Law Abiding Citizens
On Popular Support for the Illegal Killing of Wolves
Olve Krange, Erica von Essen, and Ketil Skogen
.1111/cobi.12420 . Elgenius , Gabriella , and Jens Rydgren . 2019 . “ Frames of Nostalgia and Belonging: The Resurgence of Ethno-Nationalism in Sweden .” European Societies 21 ( 4 ): 583 – 602 . https://doi.org/10
Dam Close Water Resources and Productions of Harmony in Central Japan
Eric J. Cunningham
, and carried out using machinery from the United States. In this Makio was part of a larger trend of postwar “American liberal nationalism” in which dam building was embroiled in Cold War geopolitics and stood as a marker of democracy, progress, and
Humans “in the Loop”?
Human-Centrism, Posthumanism, and AI
Nandita Biswas Mellamphy
100.stanford.edu/reflections-and-framing (accessed 26 December 2020). References Anderson , Benedict . 1991 . Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism . London : Verso . Banerji , Debashish , and
Boundary Plants, the Social Production of Space, and Vegetative Agency in Agrarian Societies
Michael Sheridan
Boundaries have become hot topics in recent social science. Studies of nationalism, globalization, and migration require attention to spatially bounded social phenomena. Gender, race, and class studies focus on bounded categories and the work it
Meshworks and the Making of Climate Places in the European Alps
A Framework for Ethnographic Research on the Perceptions of Climate Change
Sophie Elixhauser, Stefan Böschen, and Katrin Vogel
: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism . Rev . ed. London : Verso . Appadurai , Arjun . 1996 . “ Global Ethnoscapes: Notes and Queries for a Transnational Anthropology .” In Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization , ed