The politics of actually existing unsustainability : human flourishing in a climate-changed, carbon-constrained world
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Bibliographic Information
The politics of actually existing unsustainability : human flourishing in a climate-changed, carbon-constrained world
Oxford University Press, 2012
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [291]-321) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Going against both the naive techno-optimism of 'greening business as usual' and a resurgent 'catastrophism' within green thinking and politics, The Politics of Actually Existing Unsustainability offers an analysis of the causes of unsustainability and diminished human flourishing. It makes a case for seeing that it is profound and deepening unsustainability and growing injustice that characterizes the modern world. The books locates the causes of
unsustainability in dominant capitalist modes of production, debt-based consumerism, and the imperative for orthodox economic growth. It suggests that valuable insights into the causes of and alternatives to unsustainability can be found in a critical embracing of human vulnerability and dependency as both constitutive
and ineliminable aspects of what it means to be human. Rather than seeing invulnerability as the appropriate response, the book defends resilience, the ability to 'cope with' rather than 'solve' vulnerability, as a more productive strategy.
The Politics of Actually Existing Unsustainability offers a trenchant critique of the dominant neoclassical economic groupthink, which the book argues must be seen not as some value-neutral form of 'expert knowledge' but as a thoroughly ideological 'common sense' that has corrupted and limited creative ways of thinking about and through our current predicament. It offers a green political economic alternative which replaces economic growth with economic security, and views economic
growth as having done its work in the minority, affluent world, which should now focus on human flourishing and lowering socio-economic inequality and fostering solidarity as part of that new re-orientation of public policy. Complementing this green political economy, the book outlines and develops an account of
'green republicanism', which represents an innovative and original contribution to debates on the political responses to the crises and opportunities of global unsustainability. The Politics of Actually Existing Unsustainability draws widely from a range of disciplines and thinkers to produce a highly relevant, timely, and provocatively original statement on the human predicament in the twenty-first century.
Table of Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Vulnerability
- 3. Resilience, Transition and Creative Adaptability
- 4. A critique of neo-classical economics as a regime of 'truth': empire and emperors with no clothes
- 5. Green Political Economy I: Sufficiency and Security
- 6. Green Political Economy II: Solidarity and Sharing
- 7. Greening Civic Republicanism I
- 8. Greening Civic Republicanism II: Sustainability Service, a Green Republican Economy and Agonistic Politics
- 9. Conclusion: Dissident thinking in Turbulent Times
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