|
|
Dead HeatGlobal Justice and Global Warming |
Product Details
ISBN-10
1-58322-477-7
ISBN-13
978-1-58322-477-9
Publication Date
May 2002
Nb of pages
128
|
Description
At first the Bush administration said the jury was still out—that no one could be sure if the Earth was warming, and, even if it was, no one could be certain that human pollution was to blame. Then, unable to line up any real scientific support for this now absurd position, it quietly changed its tune.
These days, Bush says that we must adapt to climate change. U.S. climate policy, in other words, is: get used to it. Tom Athanasiou and Paul Baer couldn’t disagree more. In their brilliantly argued new book, Dead Heat: Global Justice and Global Warming, they explain that, even in the face of accelerating climate change, we still have intelligent choices available, and can still hold the warming below catastrophic levels. The book explains how.
Today's “extreme weather events” (record-breaking heat waves, droughts, and melting ice caps) foreshadow an increasingly unstable and dire future. Yet, despite all, the Bush administration continues to reject the Kyoto Protocol, to deny the catastrophic consequences of oil dependency, and to define the politics of oil as the politics of U.S. unilateralism, domination, and war.
In Dead Heat, Tom Athanasiou and Paul Baer explain the threat and the science of drawing the line before it becomes real. This science (and their sources are the very latest) demonstrates that, if greenhouse pollution is not drastically reduced, the earth's climate system is likely to shift—and perhaps soon—onto a terrifying and irreversible path. Then, on this grim ground, they proceed to argue that only a social justice approach can shape the necessary compromise between the rich world and the poor; that, in effect, justice can make it possible to cut a path to sustainability, even on this, a planet riven with explosive national, ideological, and class divides.
Praise for Tom Athanasiou:
"A fine and ferocious writer…"-The New York Times Book Review |
| discover the complete Open Media catalog |
We also suggest
2003 Edition
'"In this extraordinary book, Angela Davis convincingly argues that the U.S. practice of super-incarceration is closer to new age slavery than to any recognizable system of 'criminal justice.' " —Mike Davis

Subscribe
