| Course Description | In 2022, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) recognized colonialism’scontributions to the climate crisis, citing its “historical and ongoing patterns of inequity.” This was
 the first time that this group of climate experts had ever formally acknowledged colonialism,
 despite activists, writers, artists, and scholars from around the world emphasizing the
 devastations of colonial extractions. A sole focus on the present and future of the climate crisis
 obscures a deeper understanding of how the crisis came to be. This course asks: How has
 colonialism, namely, colonial processes of domination, extraction, control, dispossession,
 knowledge-making, and violence, created the climate crisis as well as enduring inequalities?
 How does the past intimately structure the possibilities of the present? How can an
 understanding of colonialism’s “historical and ongoing” effects deepen calls for climate justice?
 This interdisciplinary seminar features an anthropological and historical exploration of the
 specificities of colonial regimes’ extractive violence against people, land, and resources. We will
 see how climate change is intensified through unequal social, political, and economic
 distributions of harm and advantage, and how climate vulnerability is created and maintained.
 The goal of the course is to provide students with conceptual tools for historicizing climate
 change, and for critically engaging the consequences of colonial relations of power.
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