Land and Resource Scarcity

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Biodiversity
Category=KCVG
Climate Change
Conservation
Current Land Grab
Dutch United East India Company
ecological economics
Energy Savings
Energy Sources
Energy System
energy transition
Environmental economics
environmental justice
environmental management
Environmental policy
Environmental studies
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
FAO 2010b
Food Sovereignty
Fossil Energy Regime
Gdp Growth
Global Exploitation
Global Land Grab
Good Life
green economics
Human Suffering
industrial ecology
Klein Goldewijk
Land Grab
land grabbing impacts
Large Scale Land Acquisitions
Low Uranium Contents
Marxist
peak oil
political ecology
post-fossil fuel economic alternatives
Public Infrastructure
Radical Social Innovations
Raw Materials Agreement
Raw Materials Equality
regional planning
resource depletion
resource scarcity
socio-ecological transformation
Soil Fertility
Solidarity Economy
Sustainability
Sustainable development

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138900950
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 May 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book brings together geological, biological, radical economic, technological, historical and social perspectives on peak oil and other scarce resources. The contributors to this volume argue that these scarcities will put an end to the capitalist system as we know it and alternatives must be created. The book combines natural science with emancipatory thinking, focusing on bottom up alternatives and social struggles to change the world by taking action. The volume introduces original contributions to the debates on peak oil, land grabbing and social alternatives, thus creating a synthesis to gain an overview of the multiple crises of our times.

The book sets out to analyse how crises of energy, climate, metals, minerals and the soil relate to the global land grab which has accelerated greatly since 2008, as well as to examine the crisis of profit production and political legitimacy. Based on a theoretical understanding of the multiple crises and the effects of peak oil and other scarcities on capital accumulation, the contributors explore the social innovations that provide an alternative.

Using the most up to date research on resource crises, this integrative and critical analysis brings together the issues with a radical perspective on possibilites for future change as well as a strong social economic and ethical dimesion. The book should be of interest to researchers and students of environmental policy, politics, sustainable development and natural resource management.

Andreas Exner is an ecologist at Umweltbüro GmbH, Austria. Peter Fleissner was Professor at Vienna University of Technology, Austria, until he retired in 2006. Lukas Kranzl is a senior researcher at the Energy Economics Group at Vienna University of Technology, Austria. Werner Zittel is a scientist at Ludwig Bölkow Systemtechnik GmbH, Germany.