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Climate Change in the Global Workplace Labour, Adaptation and Resistance Routledge Advances in Climate Change Research Series

Langue : Anglais
Couverture de l’ouvrage Climate Change in the Global Workplace

This book offers a timely exploration of how climate change manifests in the global workplace. It draws together accounts of workers, their work, and the politics of resistance in order to enable us to better understand how the impacts of climate change are structured by the economic and social processes of labour.

Focusing on nine empirically grounded cases of labour under climate change, this volume links the tools and methods of critical labour studies to key debates over climate change adaptation and mitigation in order to highlight the active nature of struggles in the climate-impacted workplace. Spanning cases including commercial agriculture in Turkey, labour unions in the UK, and brick kilns in Cambodia, this collection offers a novel lens on the changing climate, showing how both the impacts of climate change and adaptations to it emerge through the prism of working lives.

Drawing together scholars from anthropology, political economy, geography, and development studies, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of climate change adaptation, labour studies, and environmental justice. More generally, it will be of interest to anybody seeking to understand how the changing climate is changing the terms, conditions, and politics of the global workplace.

1. Introduction: Climate Change in the Global Workplace Part 1: Labour 2. Thermal Inequality in a Changing Climate 3. Climate Change Adaptation through Agroecology in Senegal 4. Routes to Food Security Part 2: Adaptation 5. Old Ways and New Routes: Climate Threats and Adaptive Possibilities in the Indian Himalayas 6. From Climate Adaptation to Social Reproductive Resistance 7. Hands That Adapt: Seasonal Labour Migration, Climate Change and the Making of Adaptable Subjects in Turkey Part 3: Resistance 8. Workers and Environmentalists of the World Unite? 9. A Changing Climate: Indigenous Participation in Extractive Industry 10. Climate Change is Class War 11. Conclusion: Towards a Reworking of Climate Adaptation as Labour ‘Resistance’

Postgraduate and Undergraduate Advanced

Nithya Natarajan is Lecturer in international development at King's College, London. Her work focuses on South India and Cambodia, and explores agrarian change, rural–urban livelihoods, labour precarity, gender, and debt.

Laurie Parsons is a Lecturer in human geography at Royal Holloway, University of London. His work examines the contested politics of climate change on socio-economic inequalities, patterns of work, and mobilities.