In Climate Change, Capitalism and Corporations: Processes of Creative Self-Destruction, Christopher Wright and Daniel Nyberg seek to show how businesses have constructed narratives surrounding climate change, drawing upon interviews with corporate actors. Christopher Shaw praises the book for outlining how corporations have worked to maintain their interests and promote continued market expansion as conducive to effective climate change policy. However, he questions the utility of their interviews for systemic analysis and the book’s overarching disinclination to challenge the foundational myth of a single definable limit to climate change
What would it be like to live in a low carbon world? Governments may talk about reducing carbon diox...
Aimed at a lay reader, The Crowded Greenhouse is the collaborative effort of John Firor, director em...
This article is a review of the book “Ecology and Socialism: Solutions to Capitalist Ecological Cris...
In her latest book, Naomi Klein, author of global bestsellers The Shock Doctrine and No Logo, looks ...
This book explores the significance of human behaviour to understanding the causes and impacts of ch...
Climate change, the greatest threat of our time, is the definitive manifestation of the well-worn li...
The concept of climate change is now of global concern. This article explores corporate responses th...
Climate Leviathan provides an account of the possible trajectories of climate politics, arguing that...
Naomi Klein, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate. (2014). Simon & Schuster. $30 (har...
We all know the basics of climate change. Human activity has greatly increased the atmospheric stock...
Karsten Neuhoff’s compact contribution aims to scope the role of and recent experience with carbon p...
A synopsis of the key strategic developments in corporate responsibility around the globe over the p...
Climate Change and Human Development offers a compendium of real life scenarios and brings home the ...
Barbara Richter considers the changes we must make to see off future economic and environmental cris...
The contributors to the 33 chapters of this book show that the field is in desperate need of further...
What would it be like to live in a low carbon world? Governments may talk about reducing carbon diox...
Aimed at a lay reader, The Crowded Greenhouse is the collaborative effort of John Firor, director em...
This article is a review of the book “Ecology and Socialism: Solutions to Capitalist Ecological Cris...
In her latest book, Naomi Klein, author of global bestsellers The Shock Doctrine and No Logo, looks ...
This book explores the significance of human behaviour to understanding the causes and impacts of ch...
Climate change, the greatest threat of our time, is the definitive manifestation of the well-worn li...
The concept of climate change is now of global concern. This article explores corporate responses th...
Climate Leviathan provides an account of the possible trajectories of climate politics, arguing that...
Naomi Klein, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate. (2014). Simon & Schuster. $30 (har...
We all know the basics of climate change. Human activity has greatly increased the atmospheric stock...
Karsten Neuhoff’s compact contribution aims to scope the role of and recent experience with carbon p...
A synopsis of the key strategic developments in corporate responsibility around the globe over the p...
Climate Change and Human Development offers a compendium of real life scenarios and brings home the ...
Barbara Richter considers the changes we must make to see off future economic and environmental cris...
The contributors to the 33 chapters of this book show that the field is in desperate need of further...
What would it be like to live in a low carbon world? Governments may talk about reducing carbon diox...
Aimed at a lay reader, The Crowded Greenhouse is the collaborative effort of John Firor, director em...
This article is a review of the book “Ecology and Socialism: Solutions to Capitalist Ecological Cris...