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About Ashish Kothari

Blog • 26.10.2020

A new future for conservation: setting out principles of post-growth conservation

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By: Ashish Kothari, Robert Fletcher, Kate Massarella, Pallav Das, Anwesha Dutta, Bram Büscher

The prospects for Earth’s biological diversity look increasingly bleak. The urgency of global efforts to preserve biodiversity long predates the COVID-19 crisis, but the pandemic has added new dimensions to the problem. Conservation funding from nature tourism has all but disappeared with international travel restrictions, wildlife poaching is on the rise, and various political regimes have use...

Blog • 08.05.2017

Should rivers be granted legal rights?

By: Ashish Kothari, Mari Margil, Shrishtee Bajpai

Should arguments for degrowth be anthropocentric or ecocentric? And what does this mean in practice? There is an interesting discussion going on, starting with two recent court rulings in New Zealand and India about rivers being granted personal rights. We present an article by Ashish Kothari, Mari Margil and Shrishtee Bajpai, first published for The Guardian. Several geographically-distan...

Blog • 13.12.2016

Radical Ecological Democracy: Some More Reflections from the South on Degrowth

By: Ashish Kothari

From our project "Degrowth in Movement(s)" The multiple crises that humanity is facing are becoming increasingly visible: in the form of disasters related to ecological damage, the stark inequalities between a tiny minority of ultra-rich and the vast numbers of desperately poor, the health epidemics related to both deprivation and affluence, mass refugee migrations in many parts of the world, ...

Blog • 28.12.2015

Why Sustainable Development and Radical Alternatives are not Compatible

By: Ashish Kothari

By Ashish Kothari, Federico Demaria and Alberto Acosta André Reichel’s very thoughtful piece ‘Retaking sustainable development for degrowth’ raises several very important issues. We start by acknowledging that we and Reichel are clearly on the same page in criticizing current models of ‘growth’ including in its ‘green’ and ‘eco-modernist’ forms. We concur also on the need for the world to move...