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Ecosocialist Bookshelf, August 2016

Five new books for green lefts and left greens. Cuban science fiction ... the birth of the Anthropocene ... agribusiness and disease ... surviving catastrophe ... rising seas ... private plunder of public assets.

Marxist Ecology

Colonialism, Racism and the Global Dust Bowl of the 1930s

An important new paper challenges prevalent conceptions of the Dust Bowl, in which colonial and racial-domination aspects of the crisis are invisible, and affirms the necessity of deeper conceptions of environmental (in)justice.

Farming in crisis

Millions face drought and famine in Southern Africa

Worst drought in 35 years causes crop failures, widespread malnutrition in 10 countries. More than 640,000 drought-related livestock deaths have been reported due to lack of pasture, lack of water and disease outbreaks.

Book Review

How the Great Acceleration has changed the planet

An important history of the Anthropocene updates the classic 'Something New Under the Sun.' It describes how our world has been transformed since 1945, but avoids discussing why.

Book Review

‘Capitalism in the Web of Life’ – A Critique

Kamran Nayeri argues that Jason W. Moore's theories involve major departures from Marxism, and do not themselves provide a coherent alternative approach to understanding capitalism's impact on the natural world.

Book Review

A Radical Alternative to Capitalist Catastrophe

A valuable introduction to the development of Marxist thinking on the environment, by a leading ecosocialist. Michael Löwy explores proposals for radical change, and concrete experiences of the global struggle against ecocide.

Work and Ecological Justice

From Tar Sands to Green Jobs? 

Canada's carbon emissions cannot be stabilized using plans that are acceptable to the capitalist classes and their interest in endless accumulation. An ambitious vision of ecosocialist alternatives must connect restructuring of work to wider social...

Marxist ecology

The Anthropocene and Marxism Today

Video: John Bellamy Foster discusses the theoretical and programmatic challenges that the Anthropocene, a dangerous new epoch in planetary history, poses for socialists in the 21st century.