- Item type
- Book
- Language
- English
- Publication year
- 2009
- ISBN
- 978-0-7456-4693-0
Climate change differs from any other problem that, as collective humanity, we face today. If it goes unchecked, the consequences are likely to be catastrophic for human life on earth. Yet for most people, and for many policymakers too, it tends to be a "back of the mind" issue. We recognise its importance and even its urgency, but for the most part it is swamped by more immediate concerns. Politicians have woken up to the dangers, but at the moment their responses are mainly on the level of gesture rather than being, as they have to be, both concrete and radical. Political action and intervention, on local, national and international levels, is going to have a decisive effect on whether or not we can limit global warming, as well as how we adapt to that already occurring. At the moment, however, Anthony Giddens argues controversially, we do not have a systematic politics of climate change. Politics as usual wont allow us to deal with the problems we face, while the recipes of the main challenger to orthodox politics, the green movement, are flawed at source. Giddens introduces a range of new concepts and proposals to fill in the gap, and examines in depth the connections between climate change and energy security. from back cover.
Introduction --- 1. Climate change, risk and danger --- 2. Running out, running down? --- 3. The greens and after 4. The Track Record So Far 5. A Return to Planning? 6. Technologies and Taxes 7. The Politics of Adaptation 8. International Negotiations, the EU and Carbon Markets 9. The Geopolitics of Climate Change.