ABSTRACT

The rapid industrialization of societies has resulted in radical changes to the Earth’s biosphere and its local ecosystems. Climate scientists have recorded and forecasted worrying global temperature rises going back to the early twentieth century, while biologists and palaeontologists have suggested that the next mass extinction is on its way if the current rate of species loss continues. To avert further ecological damage, excessive natural resource use and environmental deterioration are challenges that humanity must deal with now. The human species has had such a significant impact on the natural environment that the present geological epoch can be referred to as the ‘Anthropocene’, the age of humans. The blame and responsibility for the prevailing unsustainability, however, cannot be assigned equally to all humans.

To analyse the root problems and consequences of unsustainable development, as well as to outline rigorous solutions for the contemporary age, this transdisciplinary book brings together natural and social sciences under the rubric of the Anthropocene. The book identifies the central preconditions for social organization and governance to enable the peaceful coexistence of humans and the non-human world. The contributors investigate the burning questions of sustainability from a number of different perspectives including geosciences, economics, law, organizational studies, political theory and philosophy. The book is a state-of-the-art review of the Anthropocene debate and provides crucial signposts for how human activities can, and should, be changed.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part I|43 pages

Concepts, causes and consequences

chapter 2|15 pages

The Anthropocene

A geological perspective

chapter 3|18 pages

Immigrants or refugees of the Anthropocene

Adapting to or denying climate change?

part II|35 pages

Capitalism and neoliberal governmentality

chapter 5|17 pages

Managing the environment

Neoliberal governmentality in the Anthropocene

part III|30 pages

Thinking and the non-human world

chapter 6|14 pages

‘It’s getting better and better, worse and worse, faster and faster’ 1

The human animal in the Anthropocene

part IV|70 pages

Post-growth societies and organizations

chapter 8|21 pages

Engaging with the Plutocene

Moving towards degrowth and post-capitalist futures

chapter 9|22 pages

Conceptualizing worker agency for the challenges of the Anthropocene

Examples from recycling work in the Global North

chapter 10|26 pages

From exploitation and expansion to evolutionary coexistence

A new realism for life beyond the Anthropocene 1