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Chapter 1. Climate Emergency Chapter 2. A 21st century historical materialism fit for the climate emergency Chapter 3. Historical pathways to climate change Chapter 4. Feeding the crisis. How opposites attract, the trajectories of China and Brazil Chapter 5. Fuelling the crisis. Electrifying societies, motoring in societal spaces Chapter 6. Inequalities of climate change Chapter 7. Into and out of (???) the climate emergency
Mark Harvey applies a wide-angle lens to the ultimate global crisis – climate change – demonstrating that a social scientific understanding of the historical development of societal ecologies is crucial. An original contribution of importance to all concerned with understanding problems and solutions.
Working with and building upon the generative insights of Karl Polanyi, Mark Harvey delivers a penetrating and original analysis of the climate emergency, grounded in an integrative, historical, and comparative method. Climate Emergency establishes a new benchmark, and provides new tools, for the critical social-scientific study of global climate change.
Coping with anthropogenic climate change requires us all to 'follow the science'. This must include the insights of historical and social sciences, which are epiphenomena of the planetary degradation of recent centuries. Mark Harvey's concept of sociogenesis is a landmark contribution, which he operationalizes in this book to explicate the emergency we now face. He highlights the economic and ethical dilemmas not of humanity in the abstract, but of concrete political societies around the world with very unequal endowments and histories.