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  1. Ecofeminism revisited: critical insights on contemporary environmental governance.Emma Foster - 2021 - Feminist Theory 22 (2):190-205.
    Echoing other articles in this special issue, this article re-evaluates a collection of feminist works that fell out of fashion as a consequence of academic feminism embracing poststructuralist and postmodernist trends. In line with fellow contributors, the article critically reflects upon the unsympathetic reading of feminisms considered to be essentialising and universalistic, in order to re-evaluate, in my case, ecofeminism. As an introduction, I reflect on my own perhaps unfair rejection of ecofeminism as a doctoral researcher and early career academic (...)
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  • Caring about Nature: Feminist Ethics and the Environment.Roger J. H. King - 1991 - Hypatia 6 (1):75 - 89.
    In this essay I examine the relevance of the vocabulary of an ethics of care to ecofeminism. While this vocabulary appears to offer a promising alternative to moral extensionism and deep ecology, there are problems with the use of this vocabulary by both essentialists and conceptualists. I argue that too great a reliance is placed on personal lived experience as a basis for ecofeminist ethics and that the concept of care is insufficiently determinate to explicate the meaning of care for (...)
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  • Trafficking in monstrosity: Conceptualizations of ‘nature’ within feminist cyborg discourses.Anne Scott - 2001 - Feminist Theory 2 (3):367-379.
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  • Eco/feminism and rewriting the ending of feminism: From the Chipko movement to Clayoquot Sound.Niamh Moore - 2011 - Feminist Theory 12 (1):3-21.
    This article draws on research at an eco/feminist peace camp set up to facilitate blockades against clear-cut logging in coastal temperate rainforest in Clayoquot Sound on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, in Canada in the early 1990s. The camp was said to be based on feminist principles and sometimes these were even articulated as eco/feminist principles. The slippage between these terms provides a focus for my discussion. Specifically the article explores the apparent paradox of the sheer vitality of this eco/feminist activism, (...)
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