Browse by Goldsmiths authors: Hiraide, Lydia Ayame
Up a level |
Number of items: 12.
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2024.
All the women are white, all the Blacks are men, but what about the greens? – an intersectional analysis of modern environmentalism in Britain.
Doctoral thesis, Goldsmiths, University of London
[Thesis]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame and Evans, Elizabeth.
2023.
Intersectionality and Social Movements: A Comparison of Environmentalist and Disability Rights Movements.
Social Movement Studies,
ISSN 1474-2837
[Article]
(In Press)
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2023.
Climate refugees: A useful concept? Towards an alternative vocabulary of ecological displacement.
Politics, 43(2),
pp. 267-282.
ISSN 0263-3957
[Article]
Dorothy, Anika Jane and Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2022.
What African Green Feminist Power Has to Offer.
Green European Journal,
ISSN 2684-4486
[Article]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2022.
Ambivalent borders and hybrid culture: The role of culture and exclusion in historical European discourses of migration.
Journal of European Studies, 52(2),
pp. 99-110.
ISSN 0047-2441
[Article]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2022.
Book Review: Transnational Black Feminism and Qualitative Research: Black Women, Racialization and Migration by Tanja J. Burkhard.
LSE Review of Books,
[Article]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2022.
'Please me, baby': Cardi B and the Black feminist politics of pleasure.
Brief Encounters, 6(6),
pp. 27-38.
ISSN 2514-0612
[Article]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2022.
The Difficult Business of Defining Climate Refugees.
Green European Journal,
ISSN 2684-4486
[Article]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2022.
La difficile tâche de définir les réfugiés climatiques.
Green European Journal,
ISSN 2684-4486
[Article]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2021.
Black and Southern Feminisms Matter in the Global Climate Struggle.
E-International Relations,
ISSN 2053-8626
[Article]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2021.
Book Review: Reimagining Liberation: How Black
Women Transformed Citizenship in the French Empire
by Annette K. Joseph-Gabriel.
LSE Review of Books,
[Article]
Hiraide, Lydia Ayame.
2021.
Book Review: Being Property Once Myself: Blackness
and the End of Man by Joshua Bennett.
LSE Review of Books,
[Article]