Dismantling Green Colonialism
Energy and Climate Justice in the Arab World
Book •
Dismantling Green Colonialism is an edited volume that examines how proposed climate solutions can reproduce extraction, dispossession, and imperial relations in the Global South, with a regional focus on the Arab world.
The book brings together research and testimonies showing how renewable projects, carbon markets, and public–private partnerships often socialize risk while privatizing profits.
It situates green transition debates within histories of colonialism, imperialism, and fossil capitalism, arguing that climate justice requires anti-colonial and anti-imperial strategies.
Contributors analyze cases of 'green grabbing', debates over climate reparations versus debt, and the political economy of energy transitions.
The volume aims to connect scholarly analysis with movements and offers policy and strategy proposals grounded in sovereignty, delinking, and solidarity.
The book brings together research and testimonies showing how renewable projects, carbon markets, and public–private partnerships often socialize risk while privatizing profits.
It situates green transition debates within histories of colonialism, imperialism, and fossil capitalism, arguing that climate justice requires anti-colonial and anti-imperial strategies.
Contributors analyze cases of 'green grabbing', debates over climate reparations versus debt, and the political economy of energy transitions.
The volume aims to connect scholarly analysis with movements and offers policy and strategy proposals grounded in sovereignty, delinking, and solidarity.
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Clara Mattei

Who Profits From Climate Solutions? Green Colonialism Explained



