Document Type

Article

Source of Publication

American Anthropologist

Publication Date

3-1-2026

Abstract

After decades of denial and obstruction, the global Right is increasingly willing to acknowledge that climate change is a threat to lives and lifeways everywhere. Moreover, some seize on the specter of ecological collapse to advance fascistic politics. Mass shootings by White men who propose that eliminating racialized people will ease environmental pressures—including in Christchurch and El Paso—have been the most spectacular manifestations of this shift. But close observers note kindred shifts at borders and in boardrooms all across this planet, as far-right groups work not merely to “save the earth” but to save it for specific people, and from the allegedly “polluting” force of racialized others. This commentary brings together scholars who share the sense that anthropology is uniquely suited to grappling with this complex political terrain, as a science of emergent and quotidian formations. Together, they map the weaponization of the environment in explicitly extremist spaces across Zimbabwe, Germany, Romania, Turkey, the Philippines, the United States, India, and the UAE—and also in more mundane sites where ecofascist ideologies pulse beneath the surface of the everyday. This conversation represents a work of theory-in-the-making and conveys the value of collaborative, comparative thought at a moment of resurgent fascism and intensifying ecological apocalypse.

ISSN

0002-7294

Publisher

Wiley

Volume

128

Issue

1

First Page

224

Last Page

236

Disciplines

Social and Behavioral Sciences

Keywords

Denial (0.69), Ideology (0.63), Sociology (0.59), Conversation (0.56), Politics (0.53), White (mutation) (0.49), Environmental ethics (0.48), Value (mathematics) (0.39), Work (physics) (0.34), Agency (philosophy) (0.34), Assemblage (archaeology) (0.33), Ecological crisis (0.31), Anthropology (0.3), Criminology (0.28), Climate science (0.28), Media studies (0.28), Watson (0.27), Aesthetics (0.27), History (0.26), Climate change (0.25)

Scopus ID

105023106377

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Indexed in Scopus

yes

Open Access

yes

Open Access Type

Hybrid: This publication is openly available in a subscription-based journal/series

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