Description
The volume proposes a reflection on the complementary couple of two strategic objectives of ecological movements and their social base.
Resistance in its strong social connotation is, as John Holloway says, the expression of a rebellious subjectivity which, starting from 1968 and its revolutionary instances, has gradually increased in all continents where the rapacity of capitalism and neoliberalism they have designed new systems and infrastructures to plunder the natural environment and pollute it, clashing with tenacious and lasting opposition movements such as, for example in Italy, the NO TAV, NO TAP and NO MUOS movements.
Resilience since the early 2000s has become the other strategic axis based on overcoming the ambiguous concept of sustainability and therefore on the convergence between the numerous forms of autonomy and social resistance that operate locally and which are often already linked together by mutual collaboration relationships.