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After Sustainability

Denial, Hope, Retrieval

«

Timely but discomforting...examines the myth of progress and finds it wanting. It will help climate change deniers understand the issues. More importantly, it will help environmentalists, most of whom deny their own failure, to shift from a morally bankrupt optimism to a more realistic hope – with learning at its heart.

William Scott, Professor Emeritus, University of Bath and President of the UK National Association for Environmental Education

An understanding of the bind we are in, why 'sustainability' has failed to get us out of it, and what an honest alternative might be is long overdue. This book looks beyond false hope and strained optimism to what that future might look like. Necessary and important.

Paul Kingsnorth Poet, author and Director of the Dark Mountain project

Human societies continue largely to ignore the increasingly dire warnings coming from climate and other environmental scientists. Whether or not you agree with this book’s conclusions, it will make you think about the challenges and the scale of societal response that they demand. Such thought is currently in worryingly short supply.Paul Ekins Professor of Resources and Environmental Policy and Director, Institute for Sustainable Resources, University College London

'Foster's arguments are well researched and bear the careful citations of a trained academic. However, the audience here is not academics; rather, Foster suggests that everyone - climate change deniers, environmentalists, and those sitting on the fence - should consider the arguments and be very afraid of the conclusion. This reviewer agrees - because evidence suggests that the two-degree maximum will easily double or even triple, people should be very afraid indeed. Summing Up: Recommended' - R. C. Robinson, City University of New York, CHOICE April 2015

»

Dangerous climate change is coming.


Some people still deny that it is happening. Others refuse to recognise that it is now too late to prevent it. But both these reactions spring from the same source: our pathological attachment to 'progress', of which sustainability has been one more version. Les mer

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Dangerous climate change is coming.


Some people still deny that it is happening. Others refuse to recognise that it is now too late to prevent it. But both these reactions spring from the same source: our pathological attachment to 'progress', of which sustainability has been one more version.





After Sustainability traces that attachment to its roots in the ways we make sense of ourselves. Original and accessible, this is philosophy on the edge, written for anyone who glimpses our environmental tragedy and cares about our future.





Does the challenge to stop pretending offer our only remaining chance? Read this book and make up your own mind.

Detaljer

Forlag
Routledge
Innbinding
Paperback
Språk
Engelsk
Sider
230
ISBN
9780415706407
Utgivelsesår
2014
Format
23 x 16 cm

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«

Timely but discomforting...examines the myth of progress and finds it wanting. It will help climate change deniers understand the issues. More importantly, it will help environmentalists, most of whom deny their own failure, to shift from a morally bankrupt optimism to a more realistic hope – with learning at its heart.

William Scott, Professor Emeritus, University of Bath and President of the UK National Association for Environmental Education

An understanding of the bind we are in, why 'sustainability' has failed to get us out of it, and what an honest alternative might be is long overdue. This book looks beyond false hope and strained optimism to what that future might look like. Necessary and important.

Paul Kingsnorth Poet, author and Director of the Dark Mountain project

Human societies continue largely to ignore the increasingly dire warnings coming from climate and other environmental scientists. Whether or not you agree with this book’s conclusions, it will make you think about the challenges and the scale of societal response that they demand. Such thought is currently in worryingly short supply.Paul Ekins Professor of Resources and Environmental Policy and Director, Institute for Sustainable Resources, University College London

'Foster's arguments are well researched and bear the careful citations of a trained academic. However, the audience here is not academics; rather, Foster suggests that everyone - climate change deniers, environmentalists, and those sitting on the fence - should consider the arguments and be very afraid of the conclusion. This reviewer agrees - because evidence suggests that the two-degree maximum will easily double or even triple, people should be very afraid indeed. Summing Up: Recommended' - R. C. Robinson, City University of New York, CHOICE April 2015

»

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