Once a month, we put together a list of stories we’ve been reading: news you might’ve missed or crucial conversations going on around the web. We focus on environmental justice, radical municipalism, new politics, political theory, and resources for action and education.
We try to include articles that have been published recently but will last, that are relatively light and inspiring, and are from corners of the web that don’t always get the light of day. This will also be a space to keep you up to date with news about what’s happening at Uneven Earth.
We’re back with a new reading list, this time highlighting a discussion about the sustainability of growing the service sector, an Internationalist take on reparations, and a Leftist critique of the Green New Deal, among others. As usual, we also center Indigenous and global land struggles, food politics, radical municipalism, and degrowth.
While we were putting together this list, the influential anthropologist and activist David Graeber died unexpectedly and far too early. We want to honor him here by featuring some of his best work, so we can keep it close as we continue our fight for the better world he spent his life imagining.
A small note that the articles linked in this newsletter do not represent the views of Uneven Earth. When reading, please keep in mind that we don’t have capacity to do further research on the authors or publishers!
Uneven Earth updates
Unequal exchange | Global trade conceals ecological and human exploitation in peripheries and maintains an unjust world order
Offsetting | A policy tool that allows us to imagine a world in which everything is replaceable, and where there are no limits
Extractivism | One of the most expansionist global enterprises—squashing any other ways of living with the land
Extractivismo | Uno de los proyectos globales más expansionistas, que aplasta cualquier otra forma de vivir con la tierra
Top 5 articles to read
Big Oil is in trouble. Its plan: flood Africa with plastic
Fermentation, rot, and power in the early modern Atlantic
Can we save the planet by growing the service sector?
Climate reparations: An Internationalist approach for the twenty-first century
‘Either you are fighting to eliminate exploitation or not’: A leftist critique of the Green New Deal
In memoriam: David Graeber
Radical anthropologist David Graeber tragically passed away on September 2nd, 2020 at the age of 59. His work and activism was, and will continue to be, formative and inspirational for Uneven Earth’s editors and mission. We have compiled a best of including his articles, talks and books below, with our Twitter followers’ input (please add any suggestions to this thread).
Essays
Are you an anarchist? The answer may surprise you!
On the phenomenon of bullshit jobs
Of flying cars and the declining rate of profit
How to change the course of human history
Concerning the violent peace-police
The truth is out: money is just an IOU, and the banks are rolling in it
What’s the point if we can’t have fun
It is value that brings universes into being
Dead zones of the imagination: On violence, bureaucracy, and interpretive labor
Radical alterity is just another way of saying “reality”: A reply to Eduardo Viveiros de Castro
Caring too much. That’s the curse of the working classes
The center blows itself up: Care and spite in the ‘Brexit election’
David Graeber left us a parting gift — his thoughts on Kropotkin’s “mutual aid”
Democracy is possible in Syria. My friend knew how
There was never a West (from the collection Possibilities: Essays on Hierarchy, Rebellion, and Desire by AK Press)
Talks & podcasts
Where did money REALLY come from?
Graeber and Wengrow on the myth of the stupid savage
BBC Podcast “Promises, Promises: A History of Debt”. In this 12-part series, David explores the ways debt has shaped society over 5,000 years.
Books
Did you know David’s books are available as free PDFs? We linked them for you here: Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, Direct Action – An Ethnography, Debt: The First 5000 Years, The Democracy Project: A History, a Crisis, a Movement, The Utopia of Rules, and Bullshit Jobs: A Theory.
News you might’ve missed
Behind the Beirut explosion lies the lawless world of international shipping
Virus resurgence could plunge emerging economies into debt crisis, warns IMF
Global deforestation accelerates during pandemic
From genocide to resistance: Yazidi women fight back
Indigenous struggles
‘Green’ colonialism is ruining Indigenous lives in Norway
‘The Amazon is the entry door of the world’: why Brazil’s biodiversity crisis affects us all
Meet the people saving Canada’s native grasslands
A message from the most bombed nation on earth
To save a way of life, Native defenders push to protect the Arctic refuge
Global land struggles
For the people of the river, not investors: Guaranteeing farmers’ rights to the waters of the Nile
Where we’re at: analysis
Does nuclear power slow or speed climate change?
False Alarm by Bjorn Lomborg; Apocalypse Never by Michael Shellenberger – review
Steven Pinker’s The Better Angels of Our Nature debunked
Climate apartheid is the coming police violence crisis
Africa says, “I can’t breathe”: An African civil society perspective on systemic racism
Decolonial feminism and Buen Vivir
How the world’s largest garbage dump in Staten Island became a green oasis
Just think about it…
Emancipation in the neoliberal era: Rethinking transition with Karl Polanyi
The fantasy and the Cyberpunk futurism of Singapore
‘We’ve already survived an apocalypse’: Indigenous writers are changing sci-fi
Towards a non-extractive and care-driven academia
The world to come: What should we value?
The term “development” makes false promises and perpetuates colonial dominance thinking
Degrowth
We are doomed if, in the post-Covid-19 world, we cannot abandon non-essentials
Four principles of degrowth and why they matter
Food politics
The roots of food crisis in Pakistan
‘One thing I’ve learned about modern farming – we shouldn’t do it like this’
Looking beyond the pandemic: Agroecology, and the need to rethink our food system
Animal Farms. The industrial pig, garden pig, and wild boar lead us through the rise and fall of East German industrial agriculture, but also foreshadow changes around the world where such large-scale schemes are imposed without regard for people, animals, or environments.
The strategic case for animal liberation
Cities and radical municipalism
Municipalist politics and the specter of emancipation
Moving Jackson forward: Opposing visions of a People’s Assembly
Resources
Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin: The full film
40 ways to fight fascists: Street-legal tactics for community activists
Trinational toolkit for international workers’ solidarity
9 ways you can help save the Amazon rainforest from imminent destruction by boycotting Brazil
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