"Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor" Quotes
"Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor" explores the overlooked environmental violence experienced by marginalized communities.
environment | 353 pages | Published in 2011
Quotes
The future has arrived, but it's deeply inflected by the past.
The slow violence of toxic drift is a form of violence that is neither spectacular nor instantaneous, yet its calamitous repercussions are in no way less dramatic than those of a spectacular event.
The temporality of slow violence is characteristically elusive, emerging in a context where calamities are sensationalized and where the long, attritional casualties are underrepresented.
Environmental violence is often visited on the poor and the marginalized, who possess the fewest resources to shield themselves from hazards.
The poor are the most vulnerable to the toxic aftermath of industrial and military calamities, enduring a range of health issues that are both chronic and acute.
The violence wrought by climate change is slow and incremental, yet it is no less devastating, and its effects are often felt most keenly by those least responsible for its causes.
The poor often suffer disproportionately from environmental injustices, bearing the brunt of toxic pollution and climate-related disasters.
The violence of climate change exacerbates existing social inequalities, deepening the chasm between the haves and the have-nots.
The slow violence of deforestation and desertification has profound and enduring impacts on both ecosystems and human communities.
The insidious violence of soil degradation and loss is a silent catastrophe, imperiling food security and human well-being.





