Climate and Capitalism editor Ian Angus takes a look at a series of new books of interest for ecosocialists.
***
Victor Wallis
Political Animal Press, 2018
Sound ecological policy requires a socialist framework based on democratic participation. Political scientist Victor Wallis provides both a devastating critique of capitalism鈥檚 assault on our planet, and a focused discussion of the institutions, technologies, and social relationships that will determine our shared future.
Martin Empson Bookmarks, 2018
This exciting and highly readable new book by frequent Climate and Capitalism contributor Martin Empson explores six centuries of rural rebellion in England. It shows how labourers resisted the development of capitalism, fought to control their land and labour, and built powerful organisations to defend their rights and livelihoods.
Peter Dauvergne Polity Books
Corporate spin-doctors promise that their commitment to corporate social responsibility will save the planet. Peter Dauvergne shows that they are actually doing far more to destroy than protect it. Trusting big business to lead sustainability can lead to catastrophe: their power must be reined in, starting now.
Jean Tepperman & Alfred Twu Sunflower Alliance, 2017
This 34-page comic book for youth and adults is an important tool for popular education and organising. Sixteen-year-old Gabe Sanchez travels 50 years into the future, sees the destruction wrought by climate change, and learns how people today are fighting to stop fossil fuels and build a green economy. Download the PDF, and order printed copies to build your campaigns.
Lee Wengraf Haymarket Books, 2018
This is a piercing historical explanation of poverty and inequality in African societies today, and the social impact of modern resource-driven growth. As well as exposing exploitation and imperial plunder, Lee Wengraf presents exciting narratives of grassroots organising and protest that show the potential for resistance to global capital and fundamental change.
Jason Hickel W.W. Norton, 2018
Global inequality is not natural or inevitable, and it is certainly not accidental. The global economy has been designed over the course of 500 years of conquest, colonialism, regime change and globalisation to favour the interests of the richest and most powerful nations. Jason Hickel explains how the divide was created and proposes ways to eliminate it.
聽(Second Edition) Hans A. Baer & Merrill Singer Routledge, 2018
This overview of the anthropology of climate change, guided by a critical political ecological framework, examines the emergence and slow maturation of the discipline. It presents three alternative contemporary theoretical perspectives. This edition is updated to include literature published since the first edition in 2014.
Xueming Chen, Translated by Lihuan Wu & Baixiang Liu Brill, 2017
A leading Chinese ecosocialist and professor of philosophy at Fudan University draws on the work of John Bellamy Foster, Paul Burkett, James O鈥機onnor and others to explore the logic of capitalism as a fundamental cause of today鈥檚 environmental crisis. He argues that technological fixes and market mechanisms are doomed to failure without a radical overhaul of the principles that govern capitalism.
Richard Grove & George Adamson Palgrave MacMillan, 2018
Throughout human history, large or recurrent El Ni帽os have disrupted societies and even contributed to political change, but only now are we coming to appreciate the significance of the phenomenon. In this volume, Grove and Adamson chart the dual history of El Ni帽o: as a global phenomenon capable of devastating weather extremes and as a developing idea in science and society.
Roy Livermore Oxford University Press, 2018
Plate tectonics is a revolutionary theory on a par with modern genetics. Yet, apart from the frequent use of clich茅s such as 鈥渢ectonic shift鈥 by economists, journalists, and politicians, the science itself is rarely mentioned and poorly understood.
This book explains modern plate tectonics in a non-technical manner, showing not only how it accounts for phenomena such as great earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions, but also how it controls conditions at the Earth鈥檚 surface, including global geography and climate.
Mike Davis Verso, 2018
In four major essays written over the past decade, Mike Davis explores the question of revolutionary agency, Marx鈥檚 views on nationalism, Kropotkin鈥檚 views on the desertification of Asia, and the threat of global catastrophe posed by climate change.
James C. Scott Yale University Press, 2017
Why did humans abandon hunting and gathering for agriculture, a much harder way of life? Scott shows that permanent settlements existed long before plow agriculture and the rise of states, and discusses the 鈥渂arbarians鈥 who long evaded state control, as a way of understanding continuing tension between states and non-subject peoples.