Feminist political ecology combines three gendered areas: knowledge, environmental rights, and grassrootsactivism. Gendered knowledge encompasses the maintenance of healthy environments at home, work, or in regional ecosystems. Gendered environmental rights include property, resources, space, and legality. Gendered environmental politics and grassroots activism emphasizes the surge in women's involvement in collective struggles over their natural resources.[1]
^Rocheleau, Dianne (1996). Gender and the Environment: A Feminist Political Ecology Perspective. New York: Routledge.