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Unlearn Power

Strengthening Communities in the Age of Environmental Crisis

Lemir Teron

$160

Hardback

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English
Rowman & Littlefield
28 May 2026
Unlearn Power: Strengthening Communities in the Age of Environmental Crisis examines how environmental inequality undermines ecosystems and the livelihoods of inhabitants while weighing approaches to resistance and advancing community security.

Prefaced on the figurative and literal question ""what's under the hood?"", the text explores a range of contemporary disparities and threats - endemic across environments and societies - rooted in socioeconomic inequality and systemic racism.

Building on the author's work in urban forestry, environmental planning, and energy policy, Unlearn Power applies a range of analysis approaches, frameworks, and case studies to make its case for the democratization of environmental decision-making through the centering of marginalized communities and elevating labor as focal points.

As serious questions persist related to how the potential of energy and environmental transitions can be reached, without rooting restorative justice and life cycle analysis in environmental governance, the objectives of pro-climate and environmental movements will be deficient.

The book ultimately calls for the rethinking of power - including both energy systems and political structures - to advance ecological and human well-being.
By:  
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
ISBN:   9781666978445
ISBN 10:   1666978442
Series:   Environmental Justice and Power: Studies in Knowledge, Health, Sustainability, and Inequality
Pages:   216
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Lemir Teron is an associate professor at Howard University in the Department of Earth, Environment and Equity.

Reviews for Unlearn Power: Strengthening Communities in the Age of Environmental Crisis

""Unlearn Power is an indispensable book that compellingly engages with both literal and metaphoric forms of power, offering stories, insights, and practical approaches for environmental, climate, and energy justice. Dr. Teron is a skilled storyteller, interweaving personal and public science reflections that will have readers wanting to continue learning from his incisive, intersectional engagement with environmental racism, organized labor, restorative justice, Black liberation, Indigenous sovereignty, and much more. This must-read book provides vital teachings for refusing violent power, while building the co-liberatory people power we need!"" * Catalina de Onís, Just Transition Alliance * ""Unlearn Power is a tremendous resource for anyone interested in how political and economic power creates and maintains environmental inequality. Dr. Teron's spare, clear prose invites us to ""look under the hood"" of environmental inequality to confront its structural nature. Using case studies and a wide interdisciplinary approach, Unlearn Power lays bare the many intertwined socio-environmental challenges we face, and provides critical action steps for using community-science and community empowerment to build an (albeit imperfect) pathway for transformation in this era of climate change."" * Rebecca Bratspies, CUNY School of Law * ""Lemir Teron’s Unlearn Power reframes how we think about energy, equity, and empowerment. Drawing from lived partnerships with marginalized communities, he shows how unlearning both fossil-fuel dependence and political hierarchies can build cleaner, fairer, and more resilient cities. His work is as rigorous as it is inspiring. I’ve seen Teron's Unlearn Power in action - democratizing urban forest planning by training citizens to use i-Tree tools to advocate for plantings that cool neighborhoods and clean the air and soil, while earning deep trust through service. This book captures that same brilliance and humanity, showing how we can all reclaim the energy and agency to heal our cities."" * Theodore Endreny, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry *


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