The struggle for an alternative future: Anticipatory actions and socio-environmental movements in Alt Empordà (Catalonia)
This article describes the environmental practices and discourses of local actors in the Alt Empordà region in Catalonia and how they contribute to the production of a vision of the environmental future. Based on a political ecology of hope framework, it presents different anticipatory actions and s...
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Published in: | Futures : the journal of policy, planning and futures studies Vol. 164; p. 103461 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Elsevier Ltd
01-12-2024
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | This article describes the environmental practices and discourses of local actors in the Alt Empordà region in Catalonia and how they contribute to the production of a vision of the environmental future. Based on a political ecology of hope framework, it presents different anticipatory actions and strategies which have created this vision of the environmental future since the 1970s, presenting key historic moments and actions which are central to various strategies which have been elaborated in order to secure access to the land and its resources. For decades, different successful campaigns have nourished a particular outlook, aimed at creating an environmental future which is accessible, attainable, and pragmatic. The article then analyzes how recent environmental changes and the consequences of these changes for the different local environments are significantly changing the actors’ view of the environmental future. Different shades of darker futures are emerging, in which the clear gains from environmental struggles are less tangible. It is hoped that in these futures access to nature will be more inclusive and less oriented towards a modernist and developmentalist approach to the territory. This perspective favours a thriving nature, but does so by rethinking conventional conservation models in order to take into account the changing nature of the environment in a climate change context. It is hoped that the region's demographic structure will enable its inhabitants to maintain, occupy and live on the territory, rather than leaving it to consist of protected areas or tourist areas only, and to build a different relationship with energy and water consumption. Finally, we discuss how these transformations modify local perceptions of the future and may foster an “anticipated solastalgia” as an emerging category of environmental thought. |
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ISSN: | 0016-3287 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.futures.2024.103461 |