ABSTRACT

This book explores Critical Sustainability Sciences, a new field of scientific inquiry into sustainability issues. It builds on a highly novel integration of elements from relational ontologies, critical theory, political ecology, and intercultural philosophy in support of emancipatory perspectives on sustainability and development.

The book begins by uncovering the weaknesses of mainstream sustainability science and debates on sustainable development. The new field of Critical Sustainability Sciences has grown out of a deep engagement with relational ontologies, which helps to overcome the dualist ontology underlying mainstream notions of sustainability and development. Dualist ontologies reinforce problematic anthropocentric divisions, for example, between humans and nature, subjects and objects, mind and matter, body and soul, etc. Examples from indigenous peoples in Bolivia, India, and Ghana – as well as integrative movements in Chile, Brazil, and Europe – show that relational conceptions of life, rooted in ecosophy and cosmosophy, can provide an intercultural philosophical foundation for Critical Sustainability Sciences. The book concludes by describing three key topics for exploration in Critical Sustainability Sciences: societal reorganization in view of emancipatory, existential, and cognitive self-determination; living labor and commons; and the development of new comprehensive relational scientific paradigms.

This book will be of great interest to students, scholars, and practitioners of emancipatory and intercultural approaches to sustainability and development.

chapter 5|20 pages

Cosmovisions and critical sustainability sciences

An African ontology of “Vurr” (an energy) among the Dagara of Southwest Burkina Faso and Northwest Ghana

chapter 7|27 pages

Toward a “nature alliance”

Why sustainability must be rethought in terms of relationality

chapter 8|26 pages

Society–labor–nature

The potential of conflict 1

chapter 9|13 pages

Regenerative work

From commodity to collective action

chapter 10|15 pages

Food, food systems, and sustainability

Elements of the “real food” debate in Brazil

chapter 12|14 pages

Through the veil

A relational and participatory perspective to knowledge production and sustainability

chapter 13|23 pages

Goethe's scientific method

The road not taken 1

chapter 14|29 pages

Sustainable design

A critique of the tripolar sustainability model, 15 years later