Global assemblages, resilience, and Earth Stewardship in the Anthropocene

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Abstract

In this paper, we argue that the Anthropocene is an epoch characterized not only by the anthropogenic dominance of the Earth's ecosystems but also by new forms of environmental governance and institutions. Echoing the literature in political ecology, we call these new forms of environmental governance "global assemblages". Socioecological changes associated with global assemblages disproportionately impact poorer nations and communities along the development continuum, or the "Global South", and others who depend on natural resources for subsistence. Although global assemblages are powerful mechanisms of socioecological change, we show how transnational networks of grassroots organizations are able to resist their negative social and environmental impacts, and thus foster socioecological resilience. © The Ecological Society of America.

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Ogden, L., Heynen, N., Oslender, U., West, P., Kassam, K. A., & Robbins, P. (2013, September). Global assemblages, resilience, and Earth Stewardship in the Anthropocene. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. https://doi.org/10.1890/120327

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