This book invites the reader to understand how the practice of political forgiveness and sovereignty have changed, evolved, and developed over time. Londrigan offers original insights into forgiveness as part of an analysis of prerogative power, and thus how it has been understood in the history of political thought becomes intelligible.
A radical interdisciplinary exploration of human-wilderness relationships during our current climate crisis, drawing on psychoanalytic insight, political critique, and ecological wisdom, this volume diagnoses the profound alienation endemic to late capitalist modernity while delineating pathways toward regenerative forms of being.
Wildest Dream traces the figure of the Green Man as he's passed through the ages. Along the way we meet characters old and new, and communities striving for a better world. His story asks questions about encounters with wildness and resisting violence. A beautiful, hopeful challenge to live in deeper communion with each other and the earth.
During the five decades since its origin, law and economics has provided an influential framework for addressing a wide array of areas of law ranging from judicial behaviour to contracts. This book will reflect the first-ever forum for law and economics scholars to apply the analysis and methodologies of their field to the subject of wildfire.
William Morris's commitment to a "critical notion of beauty" led him to develop a unique and important socialist position, in which beauty, desire, pleasure, and ecological sustainability were key facets to his political vision.