De-Growth is Not a Liberal Agenda: Relocalisation and the Limits to Low Energy Cosmopolitanism

Environmental Values 22 (2):261-285 (2013)
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Abstract

Degrowth is identified as a prospective turning point in human development as significant as the domestication of fire or the process of agrarianisation. The Transition movement is identified as the most important attempt to develop a prefigurative, local politics of degrowth. Explicating the links between capitalist modernisation, metabolic throughput and psychological individuation, Transition embraces ‘limits’ but downplays the implications of scarcity for open, liberal societies, and for inter-personal and inter-group violence. William Ophuls’ trilogy on the politics of scarcity confronts precisely these issues, but it depends on an unconvincing sociology of individuation as a central process in modernity. A framework is advanced through which to explore the tensions, trade-offs and possibilities for a socially liberal, culturally cosmopolitan and science-based civilisation under conditions of degrowth and metabolic contraction.

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Stephen Quilley
University of Waterloo

Citations of this work

Editorial: Degrowth or Regrowth?Mark Whitehead - 2013 - Environmental Values 22 (2):141-145.
Ableism and Disablism in the UK Environmental Movement.Deborah Fenney - 2017 - Environmental Values 26 (4):503-522.

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References found in this work

Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed.Jared Diamond - 2007 - Environmental Values 16 (1):133-135.
Cosmopolitanism: a defence.Thomas Pogge - 2002 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 5 (3):86-91.

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