Common Futures
Social Transformation and Political Ecology

Description
What does the future hold? Is the desertification of the planet, driven by state and corporate authority, the final horizon of history? Is the dystopian future implied by the systemic degradation of nature and society inescapable? From marginal activist groups to governments and interstate organizations, all appear to be concerned with what the future of our shared world will look like. Yet even amid the ongoing global crisis caused by capitalism, the potential of a different, radically rooted future has also appeared.
Common Futures explores the global emergence of twenty-first-century social movements, opposed to capitalism and state authority. These movements, Yavor Tarinski and Alexandros Schismenos show, transcend traditional political forms of organization and try to form autonomous networks premised on direct democracy and solidarity. The authors identify the importance of grassroots movements, which can bring radical change and create a more democratic and ecological future.
Common Futures examines the social and political roots of the environmental crisis and the relationship between ecology and direct democracy. But Tarinski and Schismenos go beyond the analysis of crises, contemporary struggles, and social movements: Common Futures also clarifies the conditions for the re-creation of free public time and space and point to practical steps that we can take to alleviate the problems of our future.
About this Author
Reviews
"Tarinksi and Schismenos capture our unnervingly discordant experience of time. We are, on one level, stuck in the déjà vu of capitalism, where the presents just repeats itself and nothing changes, in fact nothing is allowed to change, despite surface appearances. But on another level we are hurtling blindly towards global ecological catastrophe, fearing a future that approaches with frightening speed. To change this 'futureless present', something else is needed, something that is not enmeshed in the same mind-set that it seeks to transcend."
"How do we replace the figure of homo economicus and his cut-throat world with that of the steward, caretaker to the living? Common Futures makes the compelling case that Cornelius Catstoriadis' notion of 'self-limitation'--at the heart of his thinking about ecology, democracy, and the necessary relation between the two--is where we begin."
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