Expert answer:Question:In this course, we have discussed the growing power of corporate polluters in the Trump era. The environmental movement, as well as environmental protection agencies within the state, have come under increased political pressure from organized corporate interests, especially those associated with what I term the “polluter-industrial complex.” This has resulted in what many consider to be a profound crisis of environmental politics in America.Utilizing the class readings, lectures, and/or films, discuss a specific strategy or tactic that is currently being utilized by the polluter-industrial complex to rollback environmental/climate change policy. You will likely have to do additional research to provide an authoritative account of the particular dimension you have chosen as your topic. For instance, you may focus on the manner in which the Trump administration is removing data on climate change from federal government websites. Or perhaps you will provide an analysis of campaign money from corporate polluters in the 2016 election? Or perhaps focus on trade policy. Your paper should provide some general context for the specific strategies or tactics that you will discuss. Please devote 2-3 pages to this discussion.In part 2 of the paper, provide an additional 2-3 pages discussion of what you (or others) consider to be the solution(s) to the issues outlined in part 1. In particular, you might discuss what you consider to be the primary political, economic, and/or social obstacles standing in the way of a comprehensive resolution to the environmental crisis given the specific strategies and tactics you discuss. What types of structural changes, policies, and/or strategies might the environmental movement pursue in order to overcome these obstacles. You may want to focus on the need for campaign finance reform, for instance. Regardless, there is a great deal of freedom for you to focus on those solutions you find most compelling. Whatever your focus, however, please be sure to analyze why the changes that you propose are required, as well as why they might be effective. You must use at least two readings from the class!FORMATThe final paper shall consist of five to six pages (c.1250 – 1500 words). The paper must be typed, double-spaced! Please include a title page and indicate your college year and major. Be sure to also include a bibliography and/or footnotes page, and to cite your sources. PROOFREAD YOUR WORK!
reading_schedule.docx
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September 6th (Wednesday) – Humphrey, Lewis, and Buttel, “Social Theory and the
Environment;” and D. Faber, “Capital and Nature;” (required reading).
September 11th (Mon) – film: Before the Flood: The Science is Clear, The Future is Not
Sept. 13th (Wednesday) – climate change lecture: Read Bill McKibben, “The
Reckoning,” Rolling Stone
(August 2, 2012), pp.52-60; Naomi Klein, “Capitalism vs. The Climate,” The
Nation (November 28, 2011), pp.11-21; and Elisabeth Wilder, “Capitalism,
Qualified: What’s in a Name?” New Solutions, vol.26, no.3 (2016): 508-511 (on
blackboard and discuss in class, along with film)
Section III Readings: Capitalist Accumulation and Ecological Crisis
Micro-quantitative analysis: externality theory and environmental justice
Environmental Justice
Sept 18th (Monday) – D.Faber, Introduction – “The Polluter-Industrial Complex:
Capitalizing on Environmental Injustice,” in Capitalizing on Environmental
Injustice (available in bookstore, read and discuss) + Film: “A Killer in Town”
Sept. 20th (Wed) – Daniel Faber, Ch.1, “Not All People Are Polluted Equal,” pp.15-36
in Capitalizing on
Environmental Injustice (bookstore); and Faber and E. Krieg, “Executive
Summary,” Unequal Exposure to Ecological Hazards 2005; (read and discuss in
section 3.A.2)
Worker Health and Safety
Sept. 25th (Mon) – D. Faber, “Not All People Are Polluted Equal,” pp.36-44 + film: “Can’t
Take No More”
Energy Extraction
Sept. 27th (Wed) — film: Gasland: Can You Light Your Water on Fire? and Toxic and Dirty
Secrets: The
Truth About Fracking and Your Family’s Health,” a 2013 report by the Center for
Environmental Health
Theories of Technology and Ecological Crises
Oct. 2nd (Mon) – Film: Who Killed the Electric Car? (90 minutes)
Oct. 4th (Wed) — Who Killed the Electric Car? (Continued); and J. O’Connor, “Technology
and
Ecology;” (read and discuss)
Combined and Uneven Development & Ecological Crises
Oct. 11th (Wed) – J. O’Connor, “Uneven and Combined Development & Ecological Crisis”
Green Consumerism and the Consumption of Green Politics
Oct. 16th (Mon) – Film: Advertising and the End of the World
Oct. 18th (Wed) –film: Toxic Sludge is Good for You;& reading on “The Seven Sins of
Greenwashing”
rd
Oct. 23 (Mon) – Amy Lubitow and Mia Davis, “Pastel Injustice: The Corporate Use of
Pinkwashing for
Profit,” Environmental Justice, Vol. 4, no.2 (2011: 139-144).
Oct. 25st (Wed) — Multiple-choice, in-class midterm examination
PART TWO
Part II – Globalization, the Export of Hazard, and the Political Ecology of
the Global South
The Globalization of Poverty and the Ecological Crisis
October 30th (Mon) – read Faber, Ch. 4, “The Unfair Trade-Off,” Capitalizing on
Environmental Injustice (required text)
November 1st (Wed) – film: Environment Under Fire or Flow (globalization discussion
continued)
Natural Disasters, Sustainable Development, & Revolutionary Ecology in Nicaragua
November 6th (Mon) – D. Faber, “A Revolution in Environmental Justice and Sustainable
Development; and Faber, “A Disaster Waiting to Happen.”
Part III – The Crisis of Environmentalism: Failures and Successes
The History of the Environmental/Environmental Justice Movements
November 8th (Wed)– Film: A Fierce Green Fire: The Battle for a Living Planet (101
minutes)
The Polluter Industrial Complex and Colonization of the State
November 13th (Mon) – Faber, Ch.2 , “Eroding Environmental Justice: Colonization of
the State by the Polluter Industrial Complex;” (required book)
+ Film: Merchants of Doubt
November 15th (Wed) – polluter-industrial complex (continued)
Capitalist Accumulation and Economic Crisis
November 20th (Mon) – James O’Connor, Ch.8, “The Second Contradiction of Capitalism;
and O’Connor, Ch.9, “Economic and Ecological Crisis”
Film: The Story of Stuff with Annie Leonard
The Future of the Environmentalism
November 27th (Mon) – Pellow & Brulle, “Power, Justice, and the Environment”; and
Liz Galz, “Wealthy donors give hundreds of millions of dollars a year to the
environmental movement,” Plenty Magazine (Dec/Jan 2007): 64-69.
November 29th (Wed)) – Faber, “Ch.5, “Transforming Green Politics,” and Conclusion,
“What Does the Future Hold,” in Capitalizing in Environmental Injustice (required
book)
…
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