持続可能なコミュニティの道徳地理学:場所、エコロジーと聖地<br>Place, Ecology and the Sacred : The Moral Geography of Sustainable Communities

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持続可能なコミュニティの道徳地理学:場所、エコロジーと聖地
Place, Ecology and the Sacred : The Moral Geography of Sustainable Communities

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 248 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781441199645
  • DDC分類 261.88

Full Description

People are born in one place. Traditionally humans move around more than other animals, but in modernity the global mobility of persons and the factors of production increasingly disrupts the sense of place that is an intrinsic part of the human experience of being on earth. Industrial development and fossil fuelled mobility negatively impact the sense of place and help to foster a culture of placelessness where buildings, fields and houses increasingly display a monotonous aesthetic. At the same time ecological habitats, and diverse communities of species are degraded. Romantic resistance to the industrial evisceration of place and ecological diversity involved the setting aside of scenic or sublime landscapes as wilderness areas or parks. However the implication of this project is that human dwelling and ecological sustainability are intrinsically at odds.

In this collection of essays Michael Northcott argues that the sense of the sacred which emanates from local communities of faith sustained a 'parochial ecology' which, over the centuries, shaped communities that were more socially just and ecologically sustainable than the kinds of exchange relationships and settlement patterns fostered by a global and place-blind economy. Hence Christian communities in medieval Europe fostered the distributed use and intergenerational care of common resources, such as alpine meadows, forests or river catchments. But contemporary political economists neglect the role of boundaried places, and spatial limits, in the welfare of human and ecological communities. Northcott argues that place-based forms of community, dwelling and exchange - such as a local food economy - more closely resemble evolved commons governance arrangements, and facilitate the revival of a sense of neighbourhood, and of reconnection between persons and the ecological places in which they dwell.

Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Losing and Finding Sacred Place
2 Lament for a Silent Summer
3 Artificial Persons and the Political Economy of Place
4 Place, Religion and Resistance to Corporate Power
5 Wilderness, Religion, and Ecological Restoration in the Scottish Highlands
6 Food Sovereignty from Joshua to La Via Campesina
7 The Moral Geography of Sustainable Communities
8 Re-Placing Ethics in the City and the Countryside
Index

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