A network of global rifts

Facing the Anthropocene: An Update

Recent scientific work strengthens and extends the arguments in Ian Angus’s pathbreaking book on fossil capitalism and the crisis of the Earth System

Reading for reds and greens

Ecosocialist Bookshelf, November 2020

Seven new books and four book reviews. Engels at 200; Capitalist Crime; Eleanor Marx on England; Wheat’s Biography; Early Capitalist Farming; Renewable Energy; Sinking Middle Class

Essential Reading

The Return of Nature: Socialism and Ecology

John Bellamy Foster's brilliant recovery of a century of ecological and socialist thought will inform, enable, and inspire a new generation of reds and greens

Book Review

A People’s Guide to Capitalism

It's not easy to explain Marx's economics in a clear, straightforward and entertaining way, but Hadas Thier succeeds brilliantly. Nobody has done it better.

Red & Green Reads

Ecosocialist Bookshelf, October 2020

Five book announcements and three book reviews. Origin of Covid-19; History of pollutions; Collapse of US farming; Capital today; Social justice and the environment

Triple Crisis in the Anthropocene Ocean, Part Three

The Heat of 3.6 Billion Atom Bombs

Continuing Ian Angus’s examination of the ‘deadly trio’ of CO2-driven assaults on ocean life. Part three: ocean warming and permanent heatwaves

Movement debate

Ecosocialism and/or Degrowth?

Should the ecological left aim to reduce all consumption, or to radically transform the prevalent type of consumption?

Triple Crisis in the Anthropocene Ocean, Part Two

Running Low on Oxygen

Continuing Ian Angus’s examination of the ‘deadly trio’ of CO2-driven assaults on ocean life. Part two: The ocean is losing its breath.

Triple Crisis in the Anthropocene Ocean, Part One

Corrosive Seas

Scientists call them a ‘deadly trio.’ If acidification, oxygen loss, and overheating are not ended soon, a massive die-off of ocean life may be unstoppable.