Climate Change as Class War: Building Socialism on a Warming Planet

Available
Product Details
Price
$24.95  $23.20
Publisher
Verso
Publish Date
Pages
320
Dimensions
5.3 X 7.9 X 0.9 inches | 0.65 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781788733885

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About the Author
Matthew T. Huber is Professor of Geography in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. He is the author of Lifeblood: Oil, Freedom and the Forces of Capital (University of Minnesota Press, 2013).
Reviews
"Huber has written a 'What Is To Be Done?' for all of us who are vexed by the failure of progressive climate activism to produce a blueprint for a national action with clear strategic goals. In a blazing critique, he skewers 'radical' as well as liberal environmentalists who advocate market solutions to a crisis whose very cause is the cost-and-profit logic of energy markets. Equally he shows that the electoral road to a Green New Deal is a dead-end without a massive public struggle, integrally involving labor, for public ownership of the power industry. The shelves groan with books on the coming apocalypse, but here, at long last, is a concrete strategy for socialists."
--Mike Davis

"More and more people recognize capitalism as a primary driver of climate change. Matt Huber takes the crucial next step. He powerfully demonstrates not just why working class power is indispensable to a just transition but how we build it."
--Jodi Dean

"The most powerful missile yet hurled against bourgeois climate politics. With a laser-sharp focus, it strikes at the central fortress: the sphere of production, where one class dominates another and wrecks the planet in the process. A book for every union organiser and every climate activist and everyone who wishes for the two to join forces--to be read, studied, debated, aimed and fired."
--Andreas Malm

"This book represents an important and timely contribution to the climate fight."
--Jonathan Rosenblum, Jacobin

"We know we need to challenge the power of fossil capital to preserve a habitable planet--but how? Climate Change as Class War injects a necessary dose of strategic thinking into debates about the way forward, arguing for a mass climate politics rooted in the decommodification of basic needs and an organizing strategy focused on workers who can exert power at the point of electricity production. Huber's sharp analysis and challenging arguments open up debates that climate, labor, and socialist movements badly need to have."
--Alyssa Battistoni

"Climate Change as Class War is an audacious argument, particularly in its unabashed revitalization of Marxism."
--Ryne Clos, Spectrum Culture