Unsustainable

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A01=Matthew Archer
Author_Matthew Archer
Black
business
business-friendly
Category=JHMC
Category=KJG
Category=LNCD
Category=RNU
climate change
corporate
corporations
environment
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Europe
feminist
finance
financial actors
financial performance
global sustainability
Indigenous
markets
measuring
political action
politics
private actors
queer
reporting
sustainability
United States

Product details

  • ISBN 9781479822003
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Feb 2024
  • Publisher: New York University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A behind-the-scenes look at how corporate and financial actors enforce a business-friendly approach to global sustainability
In recent years, companies have felt the pressure to be transparent about their environmental impact. Large documents containing summaries of yearly emissions rates, carbon output, and utilized resources are shared on companies’ social media pages, websites, and employee briefings in a bid for public confidence in corporate responsibility.
And yet, Matthew Archer argues, these metrics are often just hollow symbols. Unsustainable contends with the world of big banks and multinational corporations, where sustainability begins and ends with measuring and reporting. Drawing on five years of research among sustainability professionals in the US and Europe, Unsustainable shows how this depoliticizing tendency to frame sustainability as a technical issue enhances and obscures corporate power while doing little, if anything, to address the root causes of the climate crisis and issues of social inequality. Through this obsession with metrics and indicators, the adage that you can’t manage what you can’t measure transforms into a belief that once you’ve measured social and environmental impacts, the market will simply manage them for you.
The book draws on diverse sources of evidence—ethnographic fieldwork among a wide array of sustainability professionals, interviews with private bankers, and apocalyptic science fiction—and features analyses of name-brand companies including Volkswagen, Unilever, and Nestlé. Making the case for the limits of measuring and reporting, Archer seeks to mobilize alternative approaches. Through an intersectional lens incorporating Black and Indigenous theories of knowledge, power and value, he offers a vision of sustainability that aims to be more effective and more socially and ecologically just.

Matthew Archer is Assistant Professor in the Department of Society Studies at Maastricht University.

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