When Green Growth Is Not Enough: Climate Change, Ecological Modernization, and Sufficiency
Is the pursuit of endless economic growth compatible with the deep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions required to avoid the worst extremes of climate change? In When Green Growth Is Not Enough, Anders Hayden analyzes the political battle between three competing approaches to this question and how it has played out in Canada and Britain.

Defenders of the "business-as-usual" approach reject climate action as too costly and in conflict with economic growth, while downplaying the severity of climate change. Supporters of ecological modernization, or "green growth," on the other hand, aim to use technology and efficiency to delink economic expansion from emissions and find business opportunities through environmental action. While mainstream debate has focused on these two pro-growth models, Hayden pays particular attention to the struggles and limited inroads of a third, more radical perspective: the idea of sufficiency, which challenges the continued growth of production and consumption in the already-affluent global North and asks, how much is enough? Drawing on interviews, participation in climate-related events, and analysis of key documents, Hayden shows the role these paradigms have played in Britain, one of the world’s leaders in climate reform, and in Canada, a nation at the bottom of international climate change rankings.

Rich in detail, When Green Growth Is Not Enough is a lively account of the theory and real-world politics of climate action.
1119433781
When Green Growth Is Not Enough: Climate Change, Ecological Modernization, and Sufficiency
Is the pursuit of endless economic growth compatible with the deep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions required to avoid the worst extremes of climate change? In When Green Growth Is Not Enough, Anders Hayden analyzes the political battle between three competing approaches to this question and how it has played out in Canada and Britain.

Defenders of the "business-as-usual" approach reject climate action as too costly and in conflict with economic growth, while downplaying the severity of climate change. Supporters of ecological modernization, or "green growth," on the other hand, aim to use technology and efficiency to delink economic expansion from emissions and find business opportunities through environmental action. While mainstream debate has focused on these two pro-growth models, Hayden pays particular attention to the struggles and limited inroads of a third, more radical perspective: the idea of sufficiency, which challenges the continued growth of production and consumption in the already-affluent global North and asks, how much is enough? Drawing on interviews, participation in climate-related events, and analysis of key documents, Hayden shows the role these paradigms have played in Britain, one of the world’s leaders in climate reform, and in Canada, a nation at the bottom of international climate change rankings.

Rich in detail, When Green Growth Is Not Enough is a lively account of the theory and real-world politics of climate action.
34.95 In Stock
When Green Growth Is Not Enough: Climate Change, Ecological Modernization, and Sufficiency

When Green Growth Is Not Enough: Climate Change, Ecological Modernization, and Sufficiency

by Anders Hayden
When Green Growth Is Not Enough: Climate Change, Ecological Modernization, and Sufficiency

When Green Growth Is Not Enough: Climate Change, Ecological Modernization, and Sufficiency

by Anders Hayden

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Overview

Is the pursuit of endless economic growth compatible with the deep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions required to avoid the worst extremes of climate change? In When Green Growth Is Not Enough, Anders Hayden analyzes the political battle between three competing approaches to this question and how it has played out in Canada and Britain.

Defenders of the "business-as-usual" approach reject climate action as too costly and in conflict with economic growth, while downplaying the severity of climate change. Supporters of ecological modernization, or "green growth," on the other hand, aim to use technology and efficiency to delink economic expansion from emissions and find business opportunities through environmental action. While mainstream debate has focused on these two pro-growth models, Hayden pays particular attention to the struggles and limited inroads of a third, more radical perspective: the idea of sufficiency, which challenges the continued growth of production and consumption in the already-affluent global North and asks, how much is enough? Drawing on interviews, participation in climate-related events, and analysis of key documents, Hayden shows the role these paradigms have played in Britain, one of the world’s leaders in climate reform, and in Canada, a nation at the bottom of international climate change rankings.

Rich in detail, When Green Growth Is Not Enough is a lively account of the theory and real-world politics of climate action.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780773596344
Publisher: MQUP
Publication date: 11/01/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Anders Hayden is assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Dalhousie University.

Table of Contents

Acronyms ix

Acknowledgments xiii

1 Introduction: A Battle of Three Paradigms 3

Part 1 The Laggard

2 Canada: Stuck between Business-as-Usual and Ecological Modernization 39

3 "Excuse Me, Excuse Me": Struggles to Put Sufficiency on Canada's Agenda 83

4 Sufficiency's Small Steps Forward in Canada 122

5 Alberta's Oil/Tar Sands: Time to Step on the Brake? 156

Part 2 The Leader

6 Ecological Modernization in Britain: Coalition around a "Positive Agenda" 199

7 The Limits of Ecological Modernization in the UK 238

8 A New Politics of Limits? Macro-Sufficiency in the UK 279

9 Enough of That Already: Micro-Sufficiency in the UK 325

10 Sufficiency and the State: Setting the Stage for Deeper Change? 375

11 Comparison and Conclusions 400

Appendices

1 Methods 441

2 Interviews and Events Attended in the UK 444

3 Interviews and Events Attended in Canada 453

Notes 463

Bibliography 485

Index 575

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