It
is generally accepted that a shift from fossil fuel to green energy is
necessary in order to tackle climate change. Nevertheless, there continues to
be an understanding that this does not necessarily question growth as such.
Instead, ‘clean’ energy would allow us to pursue policies of ‘green growth’. As
Kallis et al, however, clarify, ‘although certain production processes have
become cleaner and more resource-efficient, country-wide and global economic
growth remains tied to growing ecological footprints’ (P.10). Only if we
abandon growth policies, can the challenges of ecological destruction and
climate change be successfully addressed.
Re-claiming
the commons and a focus on commoning, i.e. managing and enjoying common
resources together as well as preserving them collectively for future generations,
is identified as an alternative way forward. ‘This book considers old and new
forms of co-living and collaborative provisioning as paths toward reinventing
ourselves and our relationships while reclaiming commons’ (P.23). And change is
already under way with numerous experiments of creating concrete alternatives
in the here and now. ‘Worldwide, hundreds of eco-communes, transition towns,
co-living and cohousing communities are learning together and gaining strength
in national and global associations’ (P.57).
Importantly, the book does not just highlight the problems with current growth policies. Building on the concept of commons, it also provides a menu of concrete policies for change. The public sector and essential services, for example, can potentially play a crucial role in the shift towards non-growth based policies. ‘Services such as water, energy, waste management, transportation, education, health, or childcare could be run as municipal or consumer cooperatives rather than for-profit businesses’ (P.72). Over time, this could inspire ‘commoning’ ways of managing other industrial sectors too.
The book is, furthermore, exemplary in understanding the wider dynamics of exploitation, which does take place, of course, in the sphere of production, but equally also goes well beyond into other areas of society. It, thus, identifies ‘two enduring mechanisms evolved to engineer (and to justify) forms of exploitation vital to economic expansion: appropriation through racialization, and gendered hierarchization of production versus reproduction’ (P.38). In turn, understanding these wider dynamics of exploitation is key for the formation of broad-based alliances in support for the necessary degrowth policies.
Of
course, resistance to exploitation in the workplace is crucial. Nevertheless, ‘struggles
over the environment, over desires and ways of living, and over care and
reproduction are fundamentally about modes of production, and therefore
relevant to struggles over conditions of labor’ (P.99). Hence, struggles for a
degrowth political economy need to be internally linked to struggles against
gender discrimination and racism as well as environmental destruction. It is
the resulting broad alliances, which may ultimately bring about the necessary
transformation beyond capitalism.
In
sum, this is an extremely accessible and convincing argument for a
transformation towards a political economy based on degrowth. A must-read for
all those, concerned about the future of humanity, nature and our planet as a whole!
Personal website: http://andreasbieler.net
25 July 2021
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