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The enduring coloniality of ecological modernization: Wind energy development in occupied Western Sahara and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights

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The enduring coloniality of ecological modernization: Wind energy development in occupied Western Sahara and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights. / Alkhalili, Noura; Dajani, Muna; Mahmoud, Yahia.
In: Political Geography, Vol. 103, 102871, 31.05.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Alkhalili N, Dajani M, Mahmoud Y. The enduring coloniality of ecological modernization: Wind energy development in occupied Western Sahara and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights. Political Geography. 2023 May 31;103:102871. Epub 2023 Mar 23. doi: 10.1016/j.polgeo.2023.102871

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@article{b9aa93ebf99947e2839fd1dab9a21893,
title = "The enduring coloniality of ecological modernization: Wind energy development in occupied Western Sahara and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights",
abstract = "The dominant narratives on how to confront climate change are often presented as neutral proposals concerned with the well-being of the planet and its inhabitants. The main objective of this article is to exemplify how concepts like Ecological Modernization and Sustainable Development are used in the name of energy transitions to prolong illegal military occupations in two territories, namely occupied Western Sahara and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights. By combining first-hand and secondary data from our cases, we also expose the enduring coloniality of such concepts that have been critiqued not only for their lack of neutrality but also for their contribution to the denial of basic human rights such as self-determination, sovereignty, and the right to resourcehood. We argue that renewable energy projects, in the two settings studied, are a manifestation of an ecological modernization that ignores aspects of justice and self-determination. Although touted as a solution to mitigating climate change, wind energy development in these two cases violates international law and the principle of self-determination.",
keywords = "Ecological modernization, Enduring coloniality, Wind energy development, Occupied Western Sahara, Occupied Syrian Golan heights",
author = "Noura Alkhalili and Muna Dajani and Yahia Mahmoud",
year = "2023",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.polgeo.2023.102871",
language = "English",
volume = "103",
journal = "Political Geography",
issn = "0962-6298",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The enduring coloniality of ecological modernization

T2 - Wind energy development in occupied Western Sahara and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights

AU - Alkhalili, Noura

AU - Dajani, Muna

AU - Mahmoud, Yahia

PY - 2023/5/31

Y1 - 2023/5/31

N2 - The dominant narratives on how to confront climate change are often presented as neutral proposals concerned with the well-being of the planet and its inhabitants. The main objective of this article is to exemplify how concepts like Ecological Modernization and Sustainable Development are used in the name of energy transitions to prolong illegal military occupations in two territories, namely occupied Western Sahara and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights. By combining first-hand and secondary data from our cases, we also expose the enduring coloniality of such concepts that have been critiqued not only for their lack of neutrality but also for their contribution to the denial of basic human rights such as self-determination, sovereignty, and the right to resourcehood. We argue that renewable energy projects, in the two settings studied, are a manifestation of an ecological modernization that ignores aspects of justice and self-determination. Although touted as a solution to mitigating climate change, wind energy development in these two cases violates international law and the principle of self-determination.

AB - The dominant narratives on how to confront climate change are often presented as neutral proposals concerned with the well-being of the planet and its inhabitants. The main objective of this article is to exemplify how concepts like Ecological Modernization and Sustainable Development are used in the name of energy transitions to prolong illegal military occupations in two territories, namely occupied Western Sahara and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights. By combining first-hand and secondary data from our cases, we also expose the enduring coloniality of such concepts that have been critiqued not only for their lack of neutrality but also for their contribution to the denial of basic human rights such as self-determination, sovereignty, and the right to resourcehood. We argue that renewable energy projects, in the two settings studied, are a manifestation of an ecological modernization that ignores aspects of justice and self-determination. Although touted as a solution to mitigating climate change, wind energy development in these two cases violates international law and the principle of self-determination.

KW - Ecological modernization

KW - Enduring coloniality

KW - Wind energy development

KW - Occupied Western Sahara

KW - Occupied Syrian Golan heights

U2 - 10.1016/j.polgeo.2023.102871

DO - 10.1016/j.polgeo.2023.102871

M3 - Journal article

VL - 103

JO - Political Geography

JF - Political Geography

SN - 0962-6298

M1 - 102871

ER -