Description
At the remote outer coast of Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Clayoquot Sound might appear to be positioned on the periphery of latest power and authority. And yet, as the disputed land of native peoples and the contentious website online of corporate logging in one of the most world’s last remaining temperate rain forests, Clayoquot Sound may be squarely in the course of global politics lately. These authors develop a new way of making sense of the all of a sudden changing character of political life in our day, revealing the political problems and possibilities inherent in the convergence of the global and the local so dramatically enacted in Clayoquot Sound.