Carbon colonialism: How rich countries export climate breakdown

Carbon colonialism: How rich countries export climate breakdown

by Laurie Parsons
Carbon colonialism: How rich countries export climate breakdown

Carbon colonialism: How rich countries export climate breakdown

by Laurie Parsons

Hardcover

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Overview

Around the world, leading economies are announcing significant progress on climate change. World leaders are queuing up to proclaim their commitment to tackling the climate crisis, pointing to data that shows the progress they have made. Yet the atmosphere is still warming at a record rate, with devastating effects on poverty and precarity in the world’s most vulnerable communities. Are we being deceived?

Climate change is devastating the planet, and globalisation is hiding it. This book opens our eyes.

Carbon colonialism explores the murky practices of outsourcing a country’s environmental impact, where emissions and waste are exported from rich countries to poorer ones; a world in which corporations and countries are allowed to maintain a clean, green image while landfills in the world’s poorest countries continue to expand, and droughts and floods intensify under the auspices of globalisation, deregulation and economic growth.

Taking a wide-ranging, culturally engaged approach to the topic, the book shows how this is not only a technical problem, but a problem of cultural and political systems and structures – from nationalism to economic logic – deeply embedded in our society.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526169181
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 05/23/2023
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 5.08(w) x 7.80(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

Laurie Parsons is Senior Lecturer in Human Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London and Principal Investigator of the projects The Disaster Trade: The Hidden Footprint of UK Imports and Investment Overseas and Hot Trends: How the Global Garment Industry Shapes Climate Vulnerability in Cambodia. His other books include Going Nowhere Fast: Inequality in the Age of Translocality and Climate Change in the Global Workplace.

Table of Contents

1 Moving forwards, or dumping sideways? The myth of a sustainable future
Part I: Greenwashing the global factory
2 Founding the global factory: the first five hundred years
3 Consumer power in the global factory: a lucrative illusion
4 Carbon colonialism: hidden emissions in the global periphery
Part II: Manufacturing disaster in the global factory
5 Climate precarity: how global inequality shapes environmental vulnerability
6 Money talks: who gets to speak for the environment and how
7 Wolves in sheep’s clothing: how corporate logic co-opts climate action
8 Six myths that fuel carbon colonialism – and how to think differently
Index

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