I. Introduction
1. Introducing Environmental Political Theory, Teena Gabrielson, Cheryl Hall, John M. Meyer, and David Schlosberg
II. Environmental Political Theory as a Field of Inquiry
A. Engaging Traditions of Political Thought
2. EPT and the History of Western Political Theory, Harlan Wilson
3. Culture and Difference: Non-Western Approaches to Defining Environmental Issues, Farah Godrej
4. EPT and the Liberal Tradition, Piers H.G. Stephens
5. EPT and Republicanism, Peter Cannavo
6. Human Nature, Non-Human Nature, and Needs: EPT and Critical Theory, Andrew Biro
B. Engaging the Academy
7. Environmental Political Theory, Environmental Ethics, and Political Science: Bridging the Gap, Kimberly Smith
8. Environmental Political Theory's Contribution to Sustainability Studies, Seaton Tarrant and Leslie Paul Thiele
9. EPT and Environmental Action Research Teams, Romand Coles
III. Rethinking Nature and Political Subjects
A. Nature, Environment, and the Political
10. 'Nature' and the (Built) Environment, Steven Vogel
11. Theorizing the Nonhuman through Spatial and Environmental Thought, Justin Williams
12. Challenging the Human x Environment Framework, Samantha Frost
13. Environmental Management in the Anthropocene, David Schlosberg
B. Environment, Community, and Boundaries
14. Interspecies, Rafi Youatt
15. Floral Sensations: Plant Biopolitics, Catriona Sandilands
16. Cosmopolitanism and the Environment, Simon Caney
IV. Ends, Goals, Ideals
A. Sustainability
17. Sustainability - Post-sustainability - Unsustainability, Ingolfur Bluhdorn
18. Population, Environmental Discourse, and Sustainability, Diana Coole
19. Are There Limits to Limits?, Andrew Dobson
20. Beyond Orthodox Undifferentiated Economic Growth, John Barry
B. Justice, Rights, and Responsibility
21. Environmental and Climate Justice, Steve Vanderheiden
22. Environmental Human Rights, Kerri Woods
23. Responsibility for Climate Change as a Structural Injustice, Robyn Eckersley
24. Environmental Justice and the Anthropocene Meme, Giovanna Di Chiro
C. Freedom, Agency, and Flourishing
25. The Limits of Freedom and the Freedom of Limits, Jason Lambacher
26. Bodies, Environment, and Agency, Teena Gabrielson
27. Cultivating Human and Non-Human Capabilities for Mutual Flourishing, Breena Holland and Amy Linch
28. Consumption and Well-Being, Paul Knights and John O'Neill
V. Power, Structures, and Change
A. Identifying Structural Constraints and Possibilities
29. Capital, Environmental Degradation, and Economic Externalization, Adrian Parr
30. Environmental Governmentality, Timothy Luke
31. Political Economy of the Greening of the State, Matthew Paterson
32. Environmental Science and Politics, Mark Brown
33. Democracy as Constraint and Possibility for Environmental Action, Elisabeth Ellis
34. Environmental Authoritarianism and China, Mark Beeson
35. Global Environmental Governance, John Dryzek
B. Theorizing Citizenship, Movements, and Action
36. Global Environmental Justice & the Environmentalisms of the Poor, Joan Martinez-Alier
37. Indigenous Environmental Movements & the Function of Governance Institutions, Kyle Whyte
38. Reimagining Radical Environmentalism, Emily Howard and Sean Parson
39. Framing and Nudging for a Greener Future, Cheryl Hall
40. Citizenship: Radical, Feminist, and Green, Sherilyn Macgregor
41. Ecological Democracy and the Co-Participation of Things, Lisa Disch