Is science enough? Forty critical questions about climate justice

Aviva Chomsky, 1957-

Book - 2022

"This book shows that science is not enough to reverse climate catastrophe: we need to put social, racial, and economic justice front and center, radically redistribute, and abandon the global growth economy"--

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Subjects
Published
Boston : Beacon Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Aviva Chomsky, 1957- (author)
Physical Description
xvii, 214 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780807015766
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Technical Questions
  • Can technology solve climate change?
  • What are greenhouse gases?
  • What are the main sources of GHG emissions?
  • How can we clean up our energy grid? What exactly are "clean," "renewable," and "zero-emission" energy sources?
  • What's the difference between "zero-" and "net-zero" emissions?
  • Can forests serve as a carbon sink?
  • What is carbon capture? Is it a viable solution?
  • Does LEED certification mean that our buildings are using less energy?
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 2. Policy Questions
  • What was the Kyoto Protocol?
  • What is the Paris Agreement?
  • What are the advantages and disadvantages of putting a price on carbon?
  • How does a cap-and-trade system work?
  • How does a carbon tax work?
  • What about carbon offsets?
  • How does the United States subsidize the fossil fuel industry?
  • Is natural gas a bridge fuel?
  • How have the fossil fuel and other industries influenced policy discussions?
  • What kinds of policy solutions do environmentalists propose?
  • What is the Green New Deal?
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 3. What Can I Do as an Individual?
  • Should I buy a Prius?
  • What about giving up my car and using Uber and Lyft?
  • Should we all stop flying?
  • Should we all be vegetarians?
  • What are strengths and weaknesses of pipeline protests as a strategy? What about divestment from fossil fuels?
  • Do we need to consume less?
  • Conclusion: What kinds of individual actions can make the most difference?
  • Chapter 4. Social, Racial, and Economic Justice
  • What's the relationship of inequality to climate change?
  • What do race and racism have to do with climate change?
  • How will different people-and different parts of the world-be affected by climate change, now and in the future?
  • How are pandemics related to climate change?
  • How can we fairly hold different countries, people, and institutions accountable for their contributions to climate change? What methods for calculating emissions best show who is emitting the most, and where to target our efforts for change?
  • What do workers and the labor movement have to say about climate change? Is climate change a union issue?
  • What is a "just transition"?
  • What is "energy democracy"? How is it related to the struggle to confront climate change?
  • Conclusion: Should social, racial, and economic justice issues be linked to the fight to stop climate change?
  • Chapter 5. Broadening the Lens
  • Is population growth the root of the problem?
  • Is immigration bad for the environment?
  • What is economic growth? How important is it, and how does it affect the environment?
  • Can we have economic growth without increasing emissions?
  • Do we even need growth? What is degrowth? Is it a good idea?
  • Is degrowth compatible with the Green New Deal?
  • Are we making progress?
  • Conclusion: Reasons for optimism
  • Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Chomsky (Undocumented), a history professor at Salem State University, considers climate justice in this comprehensive environmental studies primer. Writing that "those least responsible for climate change, like Indigenous peoples and the global poor, are also those who are most vulnerable to its effects," Chomsky poses 40 questions on issues regarding climate change and social, racial, and economic inequality. She covers the basics, such as "what are greenhouse gases," "what are clean, renewable, and zero-emission energy sources," "what is carbon capture," "what are the main sources of GHG emissions," and "what is the Paris Agreement." She then goes deeper into such questions as "what do race and racism have to do with climate change?" (throughout history and in the present, colonization leads to exploitation and climate change, she answers) and "what do workers and the labor movement have to say about climate change?" (organized labor has "a fraught relationship with organized environmentalism," and a snapshot history of the U.S. labor movement helps explain why). Chomsky does a great job of keeping things simple while providing ample context, and her focus on justice adds urgency. This is a worthwhile contribution to the growing body of work on the ethics of climate change. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A hard-nosed evaluation of the myriad problems we face regarding climate change. Chomsky emphasizes that greenhouse gas emissions represent a fraction of the problem, which includes ocean acidification, stratospheric ozone depletion, nitrogen release by agriculture and industry, deforestation, biodiversity loss, and chemical pollution. Her solutions take a dim view of current strategy, beginning with technology. Most private- and public-sector leaders strongly believe that high-tech advances will allow us to extract more and emit less, but this approach relies on the exploitation of the many in the interests of the few. Throughout, Chomsky makes a convincing case that capitalism bears a heavy responsibility for the current situation, and she offers a superb education on efforts to reduce emissions. Readers will learn about international conferences (Kyoto, Paris), their compromises, and, absent the political will to ban or heavily regulate fossil fuels, the plethora of largely toothless efforts to reduce emissions through financial incentives. The author delivers lucid explanations of carbon taxes, the cap-and-trade system, carbon capture and storage, and carbon offsets while pointing out that most nations subsidize the fossil fuel industry. Consequently, emissions continue to rise. In the section on individual action, Chomsky shows little enthusiasm for recycling and attempts at energy efficiency. "Personal purification is not in and of itself a very effective form of political activism," she writes, noting that genuine change involves avoiding consumption: going car-free, avoiding plane flights, eliminating meat, etc. Mass movements often work, but collective action is hard to come by, and the author admits that results so far have been spotty. She argues that social justice is at the heart of the climate crisis: 45% of emissions come from 10% of the population, "the high-consuming global elite." Marginalized communities emit less but suffer most of the consequences. Chomsky concludes with questions that the debate evades: Can there be economic growth without environmental destruction? Is capitalism dependent on economic growth? Are we making progress? An outstanding primer on climate change but not for the faint of heart. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.