| Tables, Photos, Figures and Cartoons |
13 |
INTRODUCTION A Feminist Critique of Western Global Culture |
17 |
| Cultural Logic |
23 |
| Decolonising Scholarship |
26 |
| Biodiversity and Seeds |
28 |
| The Seed of Culture |
31 |
| Weaving the Strands |
33 |
| Defining the Wild |
35 |
CHAPTER ONE The Principle of Diversity |
43 |
| Beginnings |
44 |
| Thesis, Antithesis, Synthesis |
46 |
| Feminism |
47 |
| Change |
51 |
| Creating Feminist Knowledge |
52 |
| Who is the Knower? |
58 |
| Standpoint Theory |
64 |
| Analysis |
65 |
| Synthesis |
68 |
| Dissociation |
70 |
| Associative Thinking |
73 |
CHAPTER TWO Power and Knowledge: Global Monotony or Local Diversity? |
77 |
| Power |
77 |
| The Power of Violence |
82 |
| The Power of Reward |
87 |
| The Power of Backlash |
90 |
| The Power of Obstacles |
92 |
| The Power of Systems |
93 |
| The Power of Attraction |
96 |
| The Power of Attitudes |
99 |
| Knowledge |
101 |
| Assimilation and Appropriation |
103 |
| A Clash of Knowledge Systems |
107 |
| Not seeing |
111 |
| The Perceptual Gap |
112 |
| How Knowledge is Valued |
114 |
| Cultural Homogeneity |
116 |
| In Defence of Diversity |
119 |
CHAPTER THREE One Global Economy or Diverse Decolonised Economies? |
123 |
| The Logic of Neoclassical Economics |
123 |
| How Women Are (ac)Counted |
135 |
| Economic Homogeneity and Globalisation |
140 |
| Decolonising Economics |
149 |
| Feminist Economics |
152 |
| Ecological Economics |
161 |
| Toward a Wild Economics |
167 |
CHAPTER FOUR Land as Relationship and Land as Possession |
174 |
| Land as resource or relationship? |
174 |
| Wilderness |
174 |
| Land |
182 |
| Dealing with Waste |
187 |
| "Freeing" the Land, Enclosing the Commons |
188 |
| Feminist conceptions of land |
191 |
| Indigenous conceptions of land |
194 |
| Land as possession |
198 |
| Tourism: land and wilderness as commodity |
202 |
| Urban land |
206 |
| Urban land as wild space |
209 |
| Steps to developing a wild politics of land |
212 |
CHAPTER FIVE Farming, Fishing and Forestry: from subsistence to terminator technology |
216 |
| Farming in Kenya and Nigeria |
217 |
| Forestry in Lithuania, the USA, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka |
227 |
| Fishing in the Pacific |
239 |
| Digitised and globalised farming: what the future holds |
243 |
| The Kyoto Protocol, plantation forests and Terminator Trees |
257 |
| Fishing wild fish to feed domesticated fish |
262 |
| The commodification of "everything" |
267 |
| Women as keepers of ecosystems |
268 |
CHAPTER SIX Production, consumption and work: global and local |
270 |
| Production and disparity |
270 |
| Consumption and disparity |
274 |
| Work and disparity |
276 |
| Global production |
280 |
| Global consumption |
289 |
| Global work |
299 |
| Local production |
305 |
| Local consumption |
307 |
| Local work |
309 |
| Military as gross producer and consumer |
316 |
| Conclusion |
317 |
CHAPTER SEVEN Monocultures and multilateral trade rules |
321 |
| Patents |
321 |
| Multilateral trade agreements and the shape of international law |
330 |
| Multilateral trade negotations and the convention on biological diversity |
332 |
| The World Trade Organisation (WTO) |
338 |
| Trade related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) |
341 |
| Food security |
349 |
| The Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) |
353 |
| Traditional Resource Rights (TRRs) and Community Intellectual Rights (CIRs) |
358 |
| Human Genome Project (HGP) and Human Genome Diversity Project (HGDP) |
360 |
| Conclusion |
368 |
CHAPTER EIGHT Wild Politics |
370 |
| Wild politics: a vision for the next 40,000 years |
376 |
| Abbreviations |
391 |
| Bibliography |
394 |