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Intro
Contents
1 How Culture and Worldviews Shape Development and our Environment
1.1 World Crises, Western Paradigm, Modernity and Colonialism
1.2 Interdisciplinarity and Positionality in Cultural Analyses
1.3 Central Dichotomies Regarding the Western Paradigm, Modernity and Coloniality
1.4 Cultural Change for a Decolonized Development and Human Relation With(in) Nature: A Collection of Case Studies
References
2 The Progressivity and Transformative Role of Culture
2.1 Introduction
2.1.1 The Main Points of This Chapter
2.1.2 Methodology and Concepts

2.2 Critical Developmental and Decolonization Discourses-Towards Deeper Understanding of the Progressive and Transformational Potential of the Culture
2.3 The Permission to Say "Workers Self-Governance in Socialist Yugoslavia" as a Dissonant Heritage
2.3.1 Why the Self-Governance is Essentially Important for the Future Degrowth Policies?
2.4 The Lessons from Self-Governance in Cultural Policy of Yugoslavia as Endogenous Know-How
2.4.1 The Second Yugoslavia Phase
2.4.2 The Third Yugoslavia Phase

2.5 Discussion: For the Future Built up on the Decolonized Knowledge Integration-Towards the Life-Centred Development
2.6 Conclusion
Appendix 1
References
3 Anticipation of the Degrowth Concept in the Socialist Republic of Poland of the 1970s
3.1 Introduction to the Authorship Approach
3.1.1 Is the Post-Dependent Decolonizing of Knowledge Possible?
3.2 Decolonization Degrowth Turn
3.3 General Frame of the Chosen Case
3.3.1 "Glocal" Chosen Context
3.4 The Case of the Open Plain Air in Opolno-Zdrój
3.5 Discussion
3.6 Conclusion
References

4 A New Wave of Civic Activism
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Ecological Movements in Post-soviet Armenia
4.3 Amulsar's "Golden Project"
4.3.1 The Fight for Amulsar
4.4 Conclusion
References
5 On Cultural Direction of Socio-Ecological Transformations: Lessons from Degrowth and Buen Vivir/sumak kawsay
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Research in Times of Civilisationary Crisis
5.2.1 Colonial Natures
5.3 A Brief History of Buen Vivir/Sumak Kawsay in Ecuador
5.4 The Realities of Reciprocity
5.5 An Inter-Epistemic Dialogue Between Degrowth and Buen Vivir/Sumak Kawsay

5.5.1 A Pluriverse Avenue for the Cultural Politics of Degrowth
References
6 Decolonizing Nature? Worldviews of Agroecological Farmers in Germany to Address the Global Environmental Crisis
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Background: The Emergence and Establishment of the Western Worldview in Agriculture
6.2.1 The Emergence of a Mechanistic Worldview of Nature
6.2.2 Western Worldview and Agriculture
6.3 Theoretical Developments Towards a Decolonized View of Nature and Practice
6.3.1 The Limits of Current Environmentalism

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