ABSTRACT

Responding to climate change has become an industry. Governments, corporations, activist groups and others now devote billions of dollars to mitigation and adaptation, and their efforts represent one of the most significant policy measures ever dedicated to a global challenge. Despite its laudatory intent, the response industry, or ‘Climate Inc.’, is failing.

Reimagining Climate Change questions established categories, routines, and practices that presently constitute accepted solutions to tackling climate change and offers alternative routes forward. It does so by unleashing the political imagination. The chapters grasp the larger arc of collective experience, interpret its meaning for the choices we face, and creatively visualize alternative trajectories that can help us cognitively and emotionally enter into alternative climate futures. They probe the meaning and effectiveness of climate protection ‘from below’—forms of community and practice that are emerging in various locales around the world and that hold promise for greater collective resonance. They also question climate protection "from above" in the form of industrial and modernist orientations and examine large-scale agribusinesses, as well as criticize the concept of resilience as it is presently being promoted as a response to climate change.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of climate change, global environmental politics, and environmental studies in general, as well as climate change activists.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

Reimagining climate change

chapter 3|20 pages

Climate security in the Anthropocene

“Scaling up” the human niche

chapter 5|18 pages

Modernity on steroids

The promise and perils of climate protection in the Arabian Peninsula

chapter 7|21 pages

Reimagining climate engineering

The politics of tinkering with the sky

chapter 8|19 pages

Climate of the poor

Suffering and the moral imperative to reimagine resilience

chapter 9|21 pages

Reimagining radical climate justice

chapter 10|21 pages

The promise of climate fiction

Imagination, storytelling, and the politics of the future