Sustainability and Peaceful Coexistence for the Anthropocene

Sustainability and Peaceful Coexistence for the Anthropocene

Author: Pasi Heikkurinen

Publisher: Transnational Law and Governance

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 193

ISBN-13: 9781138634275

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Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Notes on contributors -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- PART I Concepts, causes, and consequences -- 1 On the emergence of peaceful coexistence -- 2 The Anthropocene: a geological perspective -- 3 Immigrants or refugees of the Anthropocene: adapting to or denying climate change? -- PART II Capitalism and neoliberal governmentality -- 4 Capitalism and the absolute contradiction in the Anthropocene -- 5 Managing the environment: neoliberal governmentality in the Anthropocene -- PART III Thinking and the non-human world -- 6 'It's getting better and better, worse and worse, faster and faster': the human animal in the Anthropocene -- 7 Scale, noosphere two, and the Anthropocene -- PART IV Post-growth societies and organisations -- 8 Engaging with the Plutocene: moving towards degrowth and post-capitalistic futures -- 9 Conceptualizing worker agency for the challenges of the Anthropocene: examples from recycling work in the Global North -- 10 From exploitation and expansion to evolutionary coexistence: a new realism for life beyond the Anthropocene -- Index


The Anthropocene and the Global Environmental Crisis

The Anthropocene and the Global Environmental Crisis

Author: Clive Hamilton

Publisher: Routledge Environmental Humanities

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781138821248

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The Anthropocene and the Global Environmental Crisis captures some of the radical new thinking prompted by the arrival of the Anthropocene and opens up the social sciences and humanities to the profound meaning of the new geological epoch, the ‘Age of Humans’. Drawing on the expertise of world-recognised scholars and thought-provoking intellectuals, the book explores the challenges and difficult questions posed by the convergence of geological and human history to the foundational ideas of modern social science.


Sustainable Economics for the Anthropocene

Sustainable Economics for the Anthropocene

Author: Leanne Guarnieri

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2023-07-28

Total Pages: 255

ISBN-13: 303131879X

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This book examines both the need for sustainable economics and the financial practices that will underpin it. The link between rising inequality and the threat to social sustainability is highlighted to create the Economic Scale of Global Boundaries model, which realigns GDP to include quantifiable environmental and social economic gains and losses. The model is applied at both the national and company level to show its practical application for policy and everyday business practice. The impacts of inequality, declining economic growth and the impending deadlines of the Sustainable Development Goals are also discussed in detail. This book aims to highlight how principles of the circular economy and ESG can be utilized to help meet net zero targets. It will be relevant to students, researchers, organizations, and policymakers interested in environmental economics and sustainability and is written to provoke predictive thinking on the global changes ahead.


Capitalism in the Anthropocene

Capitalism in the Anthropocene

Author: John Bellamy Foster

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 2022-08-23

Total Pages: 693

ISBN-13: 158367974X

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Over the last 11,700 years, during which human civilization developed, the earth has existed within what geologists refer to as the Holocene Epoch. Now science is telling us that the Holocene Epoch in the geological time scale ended, replaced by the onset of a new, more dangerous Anthropocene Epoch, which began around 1950. The Anthropocene Epoch is characterized by an “anthropogenic rift” in the biological cycles of the Earth System, marking a changed reality in which human activities are now the main geological force impacting the earth as a whole, generating at the same time an existential crisis for the world’s population. What caused this massive shift in the history of the earth? In this comprehensive study, John Bellamy Foster tells us that a globalized system of capital accumulation has induced humanity to foul its own nest. The result is a planetary emergency that threatens all present and future generations, throwing into question the continuation of civilization and ultimately the very survival of humanity itself. Only by addressing the social aspects of the current planetary emergency, exploring the theoretical, historical, and practical dimensions of the capitalism’s alteration of the planetary environment, is it possible to develop the ecological and social resources for a new journey of hope.


Ecological Economics for the Anthropocene

Ecological Economics for the Anthropocene

Author: Peter G. Brown

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 389

ISBN-13: 9780231173438

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Provides an urgently needed alternative to the dominant neoclassical paradigm of the free market, which has focused fatally on the boundless production and consumption of goods and services without heed to environmental consequences


Sustainability and the New Economics

Sustainability and the New Economics

Author: Stephen J. Williams

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2021-12-09

Total Pages: 342

ISBN-13: 3030787958

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This multidisciplinary book provides new insights and hope for sustainable prosperity given recent developments in economics – but only if swift and strong actions consistent with Earth’s biophysical limits and principles of justice are universally taken. It is one thing to put limits on resource throughput and waste generation to conform with the ecosphere’s biocapacity. It is another thing to efficiently allocate a sustainable rate of resource throughput and ensure it is equitably distributed in the form of final goods and services. While the separate but interdependent decisions regarding throughput, distribution, and allocation are the essence of ecological economics, dealing with them in a world that needs to cure its growth addiction requires a realistic understanding of macroeconomics and the fiscal capacity of currency-issuing central governments. Sustainable prosperity demands that we harness this understanding to carefully regulate the rate of resource throughput and manipulate macroeconomic outcomes to facilitate human flourishing. The book begins by outlining humanity’s current predicament of gross ecological overshoot and laments the half-century of missed opportunities since The Limits to Growth (1972). What was once economic growth has become, in many high-income countries, uneconomic growth (additional costs exceeding additional benefits), which is no longer advancing wellbeing. Meanwhile, low-income nations need a dose of efficient and equitable growth to escape poverty while protecting their environments and the global commons. The book argues for a synthesis of our increasing knowledge of the ecosphere’s limited carrying capacity and the power of governments to harness, transform, and distribute resources for the common good. Central to this synthesis must be a correct understanding of the difference between financial constraints and real resource constraints. While the latter apply to everyone, the former do not apply to currency-issuing central governments, which have much more capacity for corrective action than mainstream thinking perceives. The book joins the growing chorus of authoritative voices calling for a complete overhaul of the dominant economic system. We conclude with policy recommendations based on a new economics that, if implemented, would come close to guaranteeing a sustainable and prosperous future. Upon reading this book, at least one thing should be crystal clear: business as usual is not a viable option.


Complexity and Sustainability

Complexity and Sustainability

Author: Jennifer Wells

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 370

ISBN-13: 0415695775

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Introduction -- Elucidating complexity theories -- Complexity in the natural sciences -- Complexity in social theory -- Towards transdisciplinarity -- Complexity in philosophy: complexification and the limits to knowledge -- Complexity in ethics -- Earth in the anthropocene -- Complexity and climate change -- American dreams, ecological nightmares and new visions -- Complexity and sustainability: wicked problems, gordian knots and synergistic solutions -- Conclusion.


Re-engaging with Sustainability in the Anthropocene Era

Re-engaging with Sustainability in the Anthropocene Era

Author: Andrew J. Hoffman

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2018-09-30

Total Pages: 75

ISBN-13: 9781108727693

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Re-engaging with Sustainability in the Anthropocene Era applies organization theory to a grand challenge: our entry into the Anthropocene era, a period marked not only by human impact on climate change, but on chemical waste, habitat destruction, and despeciation. It focuses on institutional theory, modified by political readings of organizations, as one approach that can help us navigate a new course. Besides offering mechanisms, such as institutional entrepreneurship, social movements, and policy shifts, the institutional-political variant developed here helps analysts understand the framing of scientific facts, the counter-mobilization of skeptics, and the creation of archetypes as new social orders.


Building a Sustainable and Desirable Economy-in-Society-in-Nature

Building a Sustainable and Desirable Economy-in-Society-in-Nature

Author: Peter Victor

Publisher: ANU E Press

Published: 2013-12-03

Total Pages: 98

ISBN-13: 192186205X

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The world has changed dramatically. We no longer live in a world relatively empty of humans and their artifacts. We now live in the “Anthropocene,” era in a full world where humans are dramatically altering our ecological life-support system. Our traditional economic concepts and models were developed in an empty world. If we are to create sustainable prosperity, if we seek “improved human well-being and social equity, while significantly reducing environmental risks and ecological scarcities,” we are going to need a new vision of the economy and its relationship to the rest of the world that is better adapted to the new conditions we face. We are going to need an economics that respects planetary boundaries, that recognizes the dependence of human well-being on social relations and fairness, and that recognizes that the ultimate goal is real, sustainable human well-being, not merely growth of material consumption. This new economics recognizes that the economy is embedded in a society and culture that are themselves embedded in an ecological life-support system, and that the economy cannot grow forever on this finite planet. In this report, we discuss the need to focus more directly on the goal of sustainable human well-being rather than merely GDP growth. This includes protecting and restoring nature, achieving social and intergenerational fairness (including poverty alleviation), stabilizing population, and recognizing the significant nonmarket contributions to human well-being from natural and social capital. To do this, we need to develop better measures of progress that go well beyond GDP and begin to measure human well-being and its sustainability more directly.