@article{aavik2025masculinities,
title={Men, masculinities, and the planet at the end of (M)Anthropocene: ecological/social/economic/political relations, processes and consequences},
author={Aavik, Kadri and Hearn, Jeff and Hultman, Martin and Shefer, Tamara},
url={https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/18902138.2025.2576458},
urldate={2026-05-06},
journal={NORMA},
ISSN={1890-2146},
volume={20},
DOI={10.1080/18902138.2025.2576458},
number={4},
publisher={Informa UK Limited},
year={2025},
month={11},
day={11},
pages={254--268},
annote={Quote: "People identifying as men tend to have greater carbon footprint and environmental impact, in consumption, especially travel, transportation, tourism and meat eating. Men tend to have less concern with climate change, less willingness to change everyday practice to ameliorate that, and less ambitions in that direction in public politics. Among vocal and influential masculinities, especially far-right political elites, climate denialism often combines with misogyny. Men, particularly elite white eurowestern men, dominate ownership and leadership in extractive and high-impact industries, ranging from industrial agriculture, automobiles, and water to emerging AI technologies, with growing ecological costs."},
}
