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Tables of Contents for Wild Politics
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgements
vi
 
Permissions
xiv
 
Introduction A Feminist Critique of Western Global Culture
2
7
Cultural Logic
9
3
Decolonising Scholarship
12
2
Biodiversity and Seeds
14
3
The Seed of Culture
17
2
Weaving the Strands
19
2
Defining the Wild
21
7
The Principle of Diversity
28
36
Beginnings
30
2
Thesis, Antithesis, Synthesis
32
2
Feminism
34
3
Change
37
1
Creating Feminist Knowledge
38
6
Who Is the Knower?
44
6
Standpoint Theory
50
1
Analysis
51
3
Synthesis
54
2
Dissociation
56
4
Associative Thinking
60
4
Power and Knowledge: Global Monotony or Local Diversity?
64
46
Power
64
5
The Power of Violence
69
5
The Power of Reward
74
2
The Power of Backlash
76
2
The Power of Obstacles
78
1
The Power of Systems
79
3
The Power of Attraction
82
3
The Power of Attitudes
85
1
Knowledge
86
2
Assimilation and Appropriation
88
5
A Clash of Knowledge Systems
93
4
Not Seeing
97
1
The Perceptual Gap
98
2
How Knowledge Is Valued
100
2
Cultural Homogeneity
102
4
In Defence of Diversity
106
4
One Global Economy or Diverse Decolonised Economies?
110
52
The Logic of Neoclassical Economics
110
13
How Women Are (ac)Counted
123
5
Economic Homogeneity and Globalisation
128
10
Decolonising Economics
138
2
Feminist Economics
140
9
Ecological Economics
149
6
Toward a Wild Economics
155
7
Land as Relationship and Land as Possession
162
44
Land as Resource or Relationship?
162
1
Wilderness
162
10
Land
172
5
Dealing with Waste
177
1
``Freeing'' the Land, Enclosing the Commons
178
3
Feminist Conceptions of Land
181
3
Indigenous Conceptions of Land
184
3
Land as Possession
187
6
Tourism: Land and Wilderness as Commodity
193
4
Urban Land
197
3
Urban Land as Wild Space
200
2
Steps to Developing a Wild Politics of Land
202
4
Farming, Fishing and Forestry: From Subsistence to Terminator Technology
206
56
Farming in Kenya and Nigeria
208
10
Forestry in Europe, North America and South Asia
218
12
Fishing in the Pacific
230
6
Digitised and Globalised Farming: What the future holds
236
13
The Kyoto Protocol, Plantation Forests and Terminator Trees
249
5
Fishing Wild Fish to Feed Domesticated Fish
254
6
The Commodification of ``Everything''
260
1
Women as Keepers of Ecosystems
260
2
Production, Consumption and Work: Global and Local
262
50
Production and Disparity
262
5
Consumption and Disparity
267
3
Work and Disparity
270
3
Global Production
273
9
Global Consumption
282
9
Global Work
291
6
Local Production
297
2
Local Consumption
299
3
Local Work
302
7
The Military as Gross Producer and Consumer
309
1
Conclusion
309
3
Monocultures and Multilateral Trade Rules
312
50
Patents
314
8
Multilateral Trade Agreements and the Shape of International Law
322
2
Multilateral Trade Negotiations and the Convention on Biological Diversity
324
6
The World Trade Organisation (WTO)
330
3
Trade Related Intellectual Property rights (TRIPs)
333
7
Food Security
340
5
The Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI)
345
4
Traditional Resource Rights (TRRs) and Community Intellectual Rights (CIRs)
349
3
The Human Genome Project (HGP) and the Human Genome Diversity Project (HGDP)
352
8
Conclusion
360
2
Wild Politics
362
14
Wild Politics: A vision for the next 40,000 years
369
7
Appendix
376
5
Tables
1. World's 100 largest economic entities
376
3
2. Companies, countries and name changes
379
1
3. Areas of highest cultural and biological diversity
380
1
Glossary
381
9
Abbreviations
390
2
Bibliography
392
51
Index
443