ENVIRONMENTAL
JUSTICE
The environment is never a purely natural category — it is shaped by power, capital, and political will. Environmental justice examines the unequal distribution of ecological harm, asking why certain communities bear the greatest burdens of pollution, displacement, and climate disruption. This collection explores the visual and philosophical languages through which ecological crisis is represented, contested, and sometimes obscured.
DANA in Valencia: The Two Visits of King Felipé VI
An explicative analysis of El Mundo footage — two visits, two politics, and what Rancière's ten theses reveal about nature, power and the Spanish Crown.
Read →Who Owns the Sky?
Carbon markets, geoengineering proposals, and the privatisation of the atmosphere raise urgent questions about sovereignty, consent, and the commons. This essay traces the political economy of the air we breathe.
Read →After the Flood
Displacement, memory, and the politics of reconstruction. Drawing on testimonies from communities in Bangladesh, Louisiana, and the Pacific Islands, this piece asks what is lost when a place disappears — and who gets to decide what replaces it.
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