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Recycling Class: The Contradictions of Inclusion in Urban Sustainability

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Recycling Class: The Contradictions of Inclusion in Urban Sustainability

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780262546973

Publisher:

MIT Press Ltd

Imprint:

MIT Press

Publication Date:

3rd January 2024

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Environmentalist thought and ideology
Waste management

Dewey:

363.72820954

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

296

Dimensions:

Width 154mm, Height 229mm, Spine 20mm

Weight:

352g

Description

An ethnographic and community-engaged study of the class, caste, and gender politics of environmental mobilizations around Bengaluru, India's discards. In Recycling Class, Manisha Anantharaman examines the ideas, flows, and relationships around unmanaged discards in Bengaluru, India, itself a massive environmental problem of planetary proportions, to help us understand what types of coalitions deliver social justice within sustainability initiatives. Recycling Class links middle-class, sustainable consumption with the environmental labour of the working poor to offer a relational analysis of urban sustainability politics and practice. Through ethnographic, community-based research, Anantharaman shows how diverse social groups adopt, contest, and modify neoliberal sustainability's emphasis on market-based solutions, behaviour change, and the aesthetic conflation of "clean" with "green." Tracing garbage politics in Bengaluru for over a decade, Anantharaman argues that middle class "communal sustainability" efforts create new avenues for waste picker organizations to make claims for infrastructural inclusion. Coproduced "DIY infrastructures" serve as sites of citizenship and political negotiation, challenging the technocratic and growth-based logics of dominant sustainability policies. Yet, these configurations reproduce class, caste, and gender-based divisions of labour, demonstrating that inclusion without social reform can reproduce unjust distributions of risk and responsibility. Revealing the "win-win" fallacy of sustainability and foregrounding the agency of communities excluded from environmental policy, Recycling Class will appeal to scholars and activists alike who want to create a future with more transformative sustainability.

Author Bio

Manisha Anantharaman is Associate Professor of Justice Community and Leadership at Saint Mary's College of California and the coeditor of The Circular Economy and the Global South.

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