Prelims
Citation
Harvey, M. (2021), "Prelims", Climate Emergency (Society Now), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xi. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80043-330-420211009
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2021 Mark Harvey. Published under exclusive license by Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title Page
Climate Emergency
Series title Page
SocietyNow
SocietyNow: short, informed books, explaining why our world is the way it is, now.
The SocietyNow series provides readers with a definitive snapshot of the events, phenomena and issues that are defining our 21st century world. Written leading experts in their fields, and publishing as each subject is being contemplated across the globe, titles in the series offer a thoughtful, concise and rapid response to the major political and economic events and social and cultural trends of our time.
SocietyNow makes the best of academic expertise accessible to a wider audience, to help readers untangle the complexities of each topic and make sense of our world the way it is, now.
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Tracy Shildrick
The Trump Phenomenon: How the Politics of Populism Won in 2016
Peter Kivisto
Becoming Digital: Towards a Post-Internet Society
Vincent Mosco
Understanding Brexit: Why Britain Voted to Leave the European Union
Graham Taylor
Selfies: Why We Love (and Hate) Them
Katrin Tiidenberg
Internet Celebrity: Understanding Fame Online
Crystal Abidin
Corbynism: A Critical Approach
Matt Bolton
The Smart City in a Digital World
Vincent Mosco
Kardashian Kulture: How Celebrities Changed Life in the 21st Century
Ellis Cashmore
Reality Television: The TV Phenomenon that Changed the World
Ruth A. Deller
Drones: The Brilliant, The Bad, and the Beautiful
Andy Miah
Digital Detox: The Politics of Disconnecting
Trine Syvertsen
The Olympic Games: A Critical Approach
Helen Jefferson Lenskyj
Sex and Social Media
Katrin Tiidenberg and Emily van der Nagel
The Politicization of Mumsnet
Sarah Pedersen
Tattoos and Popular Culture
Lee Barron
Disability and Other Human Questions
Dan Goodley
Endorsements
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.
–Alan Warde, Sustainable Consumption Institute, University of Manchester, UK
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.
–Jamie Peck, University of British Columbia, Canada
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.
–Chris Hann, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Germany
Title Page
Climate Emergency
How Societies Create the Crisis
By
Mark Harvey
University of Essex, UK
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2021
Copyright © 2021 Mark Harvey
Published under exclusive license by Emerald Publishing Limited
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-80043-333-5 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-80043-330-4 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-80043-332-8 (Epub)
List of Figures
Figure 1.1. | Polanyi: How Economies Are Instituted Differently in Different Societies. |
Figure 1.2. | How Societies (+Economies) Are Instituted Differently in Different Resource Environments. |
Figure 3.1. | The Natural Science Food-energy-climate Change Trilemma. |
Figure 3.2. | John Wayne in Red River by Howard Hawks. |
Figure 4.1. | Brazilian Beef Exports to China in Tonnes. |
Figure 4.2. | Brazil's Bovine Meat Production, Domestic Supply and Exports (tonnes, per annum). |
Figure 4.3. | Opposites Attract: The Production (P)-Distribution (D)-Exchange-Consumption (C) configurations for Beef and Soya. |
Figure 5.1. | Societal Variation in Energy Sources for Electrification. |
Figure 5.2. | Cars Made America. |
Figure 6.1. | National Wealth and Climate Change. Countries ranked by per capita GDP, highest (left) to lowest (right) of top 25. GDP in $ pc per year, RH; CO2 tonnes pc per year, LH. |
About the Author
Mark Harvey is Emeritus Professor at the Sociology Department University of Essex. He was Research Professor from September 2007 to 2019, and established the Centre for Research in Economic Sociology and Innovation. For the previous decade he had been at the ESRC Centre for Research in Innovation and Competition (CRIC) at the University of Manchester, and is now Honorary Professor there in the Sustainable Consumption Institute. With a first degree in History from Oxford, followed by a PhD in Sociology (on Historico-critical Epistemology) from London School of Economics, he held a post-doctoral research fellowship at the Institute of Genetic Epistemology, working with Jean Piaget at the University of Geneva (1968–1970). He was a Lecturer in Sociology and Psychology at Brunel University (1971–1974) before leaving academia to become a building labourer, returning to academia 17 years later in 1993. He was made a honorary life member of the building trades union, UCATT, in 2002 for services to the labour movement.
- Prelims
- 1 Climate Emergency
- 2 A Twenty-first-century Historical Materialism Fit for the Climate Emergency
- 3 Historical Pathways to Climate Change
- 4 Feeding the Crisis: How Opposites Attract, the Trajectories of China and Brazil
- 5 Fuelling the Crisis: Electrifying Societies, Motoring in Societal Spaces
- 6 Inequalities of Climate Change
- 7 Into and out of(???) the Climate Emergency
- Glossary
- References
- Index