Economics and Climate Emergency
eBook - ePub

Economics and Climate Emergency

  1. 342 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Economics and Climate Emergency

Book details
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

This book explores a series of connected themes focused on the role economics and other influential forms of theory and thinking have played in creating the current predicament and the scope for alternatives and how they might be framed.

Thirty years have passed since the inception of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the beginning of policy on climate change. Thirty wasted years. To most politicians, long-term collective interest has been denominated in meaningless units of time, a never and forever that has continually delayed action. From complacency has come potential disaster, and we are now living in a time of climate emergency and ecological breakdown. The next decade is a pivotal period requiring fundamental change. But numerous impediments remain. Continual material, energy and economic growth on a planetary scale are manifestly impossible, and yet economic theory takes these as a given and political leadership and policy seem unwilling to accept brute reality. Instead, they offer a series of implausible commitments and pledges rooted in technofixes, without addressing the fundamental drivers of the problems the world faces.

The edited volume explores the issues and offers a variety of ways to think through the problems at hand, from postgrowth, degrowth and social ecological economics to policy assemblage and transversalism.

The chapters in this book were originally published in the journal Globalizations.

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Yes, you can access Economics and Climate Emergency by Barry Gills, Jamie Morgan, Barry Gills,Jamie Morgan in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Economía & Teoría económica. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2022
ISBN
9781000649314
Edition
1

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Series Page
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright Page
  6. Table of Contents
  7. Citation Information
  8. Notes on Contributors
  9. Introduction: economics and climate emergency
  10. 1 ‘The economy’ as if people mattered: revisiting critiques of economic growth in a time of crisis
  11. 2 What does degrowth mean? A few points of clarification
  12. 3 What does Degrowth mean? Some comments on Jason Hickel’s ‘A few points of clarification’
  13. 4 Economics and the climate catastrophe
  14. 5 Apologists for growth: passive revolutionaries in a passive revolution
  15. 6 The appallingly bad neoclassical economics of climate change
  16. 7 The failure of Integrated Assessment Models as a response to ‘climate emergency’ and ecological breakdown: the Emperor has no clothes
  17. 8 Teaching climate complacency: mainstream economics textbooks and the need for transformation in economics education
  18. 9 Unthinking knowledge production: from post-Covid to post-carbon futures
  19. 10 In search of a political economy of the postgrowth era
  20. 11 Rule of nature or rule of capital? Physiocracy, ecological economics, and ideology
  21. 12 Economics, the climate change policy-assemblage and the new materialisms: towards a comprehensive policy
  22. 13 From climate change to economic change? Reflections on ‘feedback’
  23. 14 The regenerative turn: on the re-emergence of reciprocity embedded in living ecologies
  24. 15 The global climate of land politics
  25. 16 From the Paris Agreement to the Anthropocene and Planetary Boundaries Framework: an interview with Will Steffen
  26. 17 Postscript, an end to the war on nature: COP in or COP out?
  27. 18 Global Climate Emergency: after COP24, climate science, urgency, and the threat to humanity
  28. 19 Fiddling while the planet burns? COP25 in perspective
  29. 20 Democratizing global climate governance? The case of indigenous representation in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
  30. 21 Climate and food inequality: the South African Food Sovereignty Campaign response
  31. 22 The global south, degrowth and The Simpler Way movement: the need for structural solutions at the global level
  32. 23 Climate justice and sustained transnational mobilization
  33. 24 Deep Restoration: from The Great Implosion to The Great Awakening
  34. Index