Topic Course: Feminisms in Environment and Development
one-way Exclusions
Lecture and private study
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Course Description
DEVS 492-004
Popular mainstream 鈥渨omen and environment鈥 development discourses see nature as an 鈥榰nruly鈥 force that disproportionately impacts women during environmental or climate change crises. Instead of pursuing this line of thinking, this seminar on Feminisms in Environment and Development will foreground 鈥渇eminist ecologies鈥 highlighting the dynamic interdependencies between society and nature that colonial processes have disrupted. Discussions will shed light on how people dynamically interact with nature through their intersectional subjectivities, embodied knowledges, and care for land, water, forests and the commons. The seminar also recognizes that women鈥檚 bodies are their first territory: however, growing neoliberal accumulation and corporate control of resources that extract nature also exploit feminized and racialized bodies, their labor and resources, thus keeping them persistently unequal and marginalized. Students will also familiarize themselves with present efforts to include gender discourses in sustainable development debates and policy prescriptions. They will critically analyze how 鈥済ender鈥 has been co-opted or accommodated by 鈥榮mart鈥 climate and environmental interventions that sidestep justice for exploited segments of nature and society.