All Stories

  1. Neoliberal developmentalism, authoritarian populism, and extractivism in the countryside: the Soma mining disaster in Turkey
  2. The extractive imperative in Latin America
  3. The extractive imperative and the boom in environmental conflicts at the end of the progressive cycle in Latin America
  4. Climate Policy in Turkey: a Paradoxical Situation?
  5. Critique, Rediscovery and Revival in Development Studies
  6. Environmentalism of the malcontent: anatomy of an anti-coal power plant struggle in Turkey
  7. The demise of a new conservation and development policy? Exploring the tensions of the Yasuní ITT initiative
  8. Property rights, nationalisation and extractive industries in Bolivia and Ecuador
  9. Social conflict, economic development and extractive industry: evidence from South America
  10. Payments for ecosystem services and the fatal attraction of win-win solutions
  11. Structural Change, Land Use and the State in China: Making Sense of Three Divergent Processes
  12. “Stating” Nature’s Role in Ecuadorian Development
  13. INTRODUCTION: NEOLIBERAL CONSERVATION, UNEVEN GEOGRAPHICAL DEVELOPMENT AND THE DYNAMICS OF CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM
  14. BETWEEN ‘MARX AND MARKETS’? THE STATE, THE ‘LEFT TURN’ AND NATURE IN ECUADOR
  15. Nature™ Inc.: Changes and Continuities in Neoliberal Conservation and Market-based Environmental Policy
  16. Fuelling Misconceptions: UNEP, Natural Resources, the Environment and Conflict
  17. Michael Watts
  18. The European Union and Turkey: Who Defines Environmental Progress?
  19. Risk Society at Europe’s Periphery? The Case of the Bergama Resistance in Turkey
  20. Book reviews
  21. Book Review: Robert A. Packenham, The Dependency Movement: Scholarship and Politics in Development Studies (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998, pp, 362, US$21.00 pbk.)
  22. Environment