FRAW Gallery: ‘Agitate, Educate, Organize!’

BOKK Journals:
‘Globalizations’

Globalizations publishes new, multiple, and cutting-edge research on global processes and conditions. The journal is committed to providing the widest possible space for discussions of global interconnectedness. It welcomes scholarship that addresses both contemporary acute issues and deep long-term structural shifts, pushes knowledge beyond established boundaries, and shapes the debates and practices of the future. The journal is sceptical toward any single theory of globalization and is committed to foregrounding multiple interpretations and processes that together give rise to many possible globalizations—and many possible alternatives.

This page collects all citations from this journal, providing an ‘open’ link to access that research paper where possible. The citation for each paper also lists the content of the FRAW site which references that work, with links directly to the paragraph citing the paper. This listing uses the same format as the FRAW Subject Index – and a complete table of the abbreviations used in the listing can be found on the main index page. Note, paywalled links are shown in red, and ‘open’ links are shown in blue.

Papers cited (reverse chronological order)

#hickel_2020

Jason Hickel, Globalizations, September 2020.

What does degrowth mean? A few points of clarification

Degrowth is a planned reduction of energy and resource use designed to bring the economy back into balance with the living world in a way that reduces inequality and improves human well-being. Over the past few years, the idea has attracted significant attention among academics and social movements, but for people new to the idea it raises a number of questions. Here I set out to clarify three specific issues: (1) I specify what degrowth means, and argue that the framing of degrowth is an asset, not a liability; (2) I explain how degrowth differs fundamentally from a recession; and (3) I affirm that degrowth is primarily focused on high-income nations, and explore the implications of degrowth for the global South.

Referenced in: wrd-005/§8.