Health figures centrally in late twentieth-century environmental
activism. There are many competing claims about the health of
ecosystems, the health of the planet, and the health of humans, yet
there is little agreement among the likes of D.C. lobbyists,
grassroots organizers, eco-anarchist collectives, and science-based
advocacy organizations about whose health matters most, or what
health even means. In this book, Jennifer Thomson untangles the
complex web of political, social, and intellectual developments
that gave rise to the multiplicity of claims and concerns about
environmental health.
Thomson traces four strands of activism from the 1970s to the
present: the environmental lobby, environmental justice groups,
radical environmentalism and bioregionalism, and climate justice
activism. By focusing on health, environmentalists were empowered
to intervene in the rise of neoliberalism, the erosion of the
regulatory state, and the decimation of mass-based progressive
politics. Yet, as this book reveals, an individualist definition of
health ultimately won out over more communal understandings.
Considering this turn from collective solidarity toward individual
health helps explain the near paralysis of collective action in the
face of planetary disaster.