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E-grāmata: Building the Critical Anthropology of Climate Change: Towards a Socio-Ecological Revolution

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This book applies a critical perspective to anthropogenic climate change and the global socio-ecological crisis. The book focuses on the critical anthropology of climate change by opening up a dialogue with the two main contending perspectives in the anthropology of climate change, namely cultural ecological perspective on climate change and the cultural interpretive perspective on climate change. Guided by these perspectives, the book takes a firm stance on the types of changes that are needed to sustain life on Earth as we know it. Within this framework, it explores issues of climate and social equity, the nature of the current era of Earth’s geohistory, the perspectives of the elite polluters driving climate change, and the regrettable contributions of anthropologists and other scholars to climate change. The book also engages with the sociology, political science and geography of climate change; by exploring these various approaches to thinking about and responding to the existential threat of an ever warming climate, the authors lay the foundation for a brave new sustainable world that is socially just, highly democratic, and climatically-safe for humans and other species.This book will be of interest to researchers and students in Environmental Anthropology, Climate Change, Human Geography, Sociology, and Political Science.

This book applies a critical perspective to anthropogenic climate change and the global socio-ecological crisis. It will be of interest to researchers and students studying environmental anthropology, climate change, human geography, sociology, and political science.

Introduction

Chapter 1 Climate turmoil: introducing a socioecological model of human
action, environmental impact, and the mounting vulnerability

Chapter 2 Conflicting anthropological perspectives: cultural ecological,
cultural interpretive, and critical anthropology of climate change

Chapter 3 Anthropocene or Capitalocene: rethinking our era of climate
change production

Chapter 4 Social inequality and climate change

Chapter 5 - Planetary health: a critical health anthropological perspective

Chapter 6 - Toward a critical anthropology of climate refugees

Chapter 7 Can ecological modernization contain climate change? How the rich
and powerful want to address the ecological crisis

Chapter 8 The elephant in the sky: why and how anthropologists need to
grapple with their heavy reliance on flying in the era of climate change

Chapter 9 Two genres of the climate movement: climate action vs climate
justice

Chapter 10 Towards a critical anthropology of the future: climate change
and future scenarios

Chapter 11 Eco-socialism as the ultimate climate change mitigation strategy
Hans A. Baer is Principal Honorary Research Fellow, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne, Australia.

Merrill Singer is Professor Emeritus in Department of Anthropology at the University of Connecticut, USA.