@article{jpe 2267, author = {Alexander Dunlap}, title = {The direction of ecological insurrections: political ecology comes to daggers with Fukuoka}, volume = {27}, year = {2020}, url = {http://journals.librarypublishing.arizona.edu/jpe/article/id/2267/}, issue = {1}, doi = {10.2458/v27i1.23751}, abstract = {<p>This article proposes a political ecology of resistance. This is done by putting forward <i>insurrectionary political ecology</i> as a lens of research and struggle, through the confluence of the complementary "political" practice of insurrectionary anarchism and the "ecological" method of "no-till natural farming." While seemingly different, the article argues that these practices are compatible, animating a political ecology of resistance around anti-authoritarian political and ecological lifeways. This direction, or compass, of insurrectionary political ecology is discussed in relation to other autonomous tendencies, as it complements and strengthens existing critical schools of thought heavily influenced by political ecology, such as (decolonial) degrowth, environmental justice and post-development. Insurrectionary political ecology deepens connections with scholarly rebels in political and ecological struggles outside—and rejecting—the university system. The article includes discussions of research ethics, various conceptions of "activism", autonomous tendencies and existing differences between the concepts of "revolution" and "insurrection", in order to debate notions of "counter-hegemony" and "duel-power." The overall purpose here is to offer a theoretical ethos for a political ecology of resistance that invigorates political praxis to subvert the ongoing socio-ecological catastrophes.</p>}, month = {1}, pages = {988-1014}, keywords = {environmental justice,insurrectionary ecology,degrowth,decolonization,post-development,insurrectionary political ecology,resistance}, issn = {1073-0451}, publisher={University of Arizona Libraries}, journal = {Journal of Political Ecology} }