Dougald Hine:
Two possibilities arise from this newfound sense of vulnerability. It can be a humbling moment in which, brought down to earth, we are able to hear at last what those on the receiving end of Western projects of colonisation, salvation, modernisation and development have been trying to tell us for generations. Or it can be the licence for the grandest version of that project yet: an attempt to turn our planetary home and all those we share it with, our human kin and our more-than-human kith, into an object of global management and control, and all in the name of ‘saving the world’.
I’m only half way through, but Hine’s At Work in the Ruins has a solid place in my “this should be mandatory high school or undergrad reading” list.