"The world is facing an unprecedented climate and environmental emergency. Scientists have identified human activity as primarily responsible for the climate crisis, which together with rampant environmental pollution, and the unbridled activities of the extractive and agricultural industries, pose a direct threat to the sustainability of life on this planet. This edition of Global Information Society Watch (GISWatch) seeks to understand the constructive role that technology can play in confronting the crises. It disrupts the normative understanding of technology being an easy panacea to the planet’s environmental challenges and suggests that a nuanced and contextual use of technology is necessary for real sustainability to be achieved. A series of thematic reports frame different aspects of the relationship between digital technology and environmental sustainability from a human rights and social justice perspective, while 46 country and regional reports explore the diverse frontiers where technology meets the needs of both the environment and communities and where technology itself becomes a challenge to a sustainable future." (Back cover)
Introduction: Returning to the river / Alan Finlay, 7
THEMATIC REPORTS
Bigger, more, better, faster: The ecological paradox of digital economies / Paz Peña, 13
ICT and the environment: Building a dialectical understanding / Arun Madhavan and Sreekrishna Sankar, 17
Removing the barriers to repair / Ugo Vallauri, 23
Big tech goes green(washing): Feminist lenses to unveil new tools in the master’s houses / Camila Nobrega and Joana Varon, 26
The Sustainable Development Goals and the environment / David Souter, 34
Imagining a principle for a feminist internet focusing on environmental justice / Jes Ciacci, 38
Indigenous peoples’ perspectives on environmental sustainability and technology / Joan Carling and Raymond de Chavez, 42
What is the circular economy of ICTs? / Leandro Navarro, 46
Community networks: A people – and environment – centred approach to connectivity / “Connecting the Unconnected” project team, 48
COUNTRY AND REGIONAL REPORTS
46 reports, 53-268