Ashley Dodsworth is Lecturer in the School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies at University of Bristol. She is interested in the intersection of environmental political theory and the history of political thought.
Iseult Honohan is Emeritus Associate Professor in the School of Politics and International Relations at University College Dublin. Her research interests lie mainly in normative political theory, particularly civic republican political thought and its application to issues of citizenship, immigration and diversity, justice and moral obligations, and ethics and public affairs.
Introduction 1. Freedom and ecological limits 2. Vulnerability and non- domination: a republican perspective on natural limits 3. Republican environmental rights 4. Green republicanism and a 'Just Transition' from the tyranny of economic growth 5. Reconfiguring non- domination: green politics from pre- emption to inoperosity 6. Preference transformation through 'green political judgement formation'? Rethinking informal deliberative citizen participation processes 7. The Anthropocene and the republic
The political and environmental crises of the twenty-first century require new approaches to the way we think and act politically. This book explores the potential for engagement between green and civic republican thought as part of these new approaches.