Stanziani / Piketty | Earth Capital | Buch | 978-1-5095-7149-9 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 300 Seiten

Stanziani / Piketty

Earth Capital

The Long History of Capitalism and Its Aftermath
1. Auflage 2025
ISBN: 978-1-5095-7149-9
Verlag: John Wiley and Sons Ltd

The Long History of Capitalism and Its Aftermath

Buch, Englisch, 300 Seiten

ISBN: 978-1-5095-7149-9
Verlag: John Wiley and Sons Ltd


This book is a major new history of capitalism which takes account of the material and ecological underpinnings of productive activity as well as the social, political and institutional dimensions of economic life. It retraces the history of capitalism over a long time period, giving particular attention to role of food, agriculture, energy and natural resources and with an eye to the future, mindful of the need to find solutions to an ecological crisis that threatens to overwhelm us.

Alessandro Stanziani shows that the development of capitalism since the 12th century has been based on two primary forms of exploitation: the exploitation of labour, often coerced, and the exploitation of what he calls ‘Earth capital’, by which he means both the planet as a whole and its land and natural resources as factors of production. While these two forms of exploitation have gone hand-in-hand, the emphasis has shifted over time: forced labour gradually declined in importance from 1870 on and the exploitation of land, fossil fuels and natural resources grew at an unprecedented rate from 1870 to the present, the destructive consequences of which are becoming increasingly apparent today.

Looking to the future, Stanziani argues that in order to deal with the immense challenges we now face, we must be prepared radically to rethink our economic and political systems. He proposes a new social contract that would make democracy, social equality and the environment the three pillars of the world of tomorrow.

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Weitere Infos & Material


Foreword by Thomas Piketty   Earth Capital: Long Live Eco-History!

Introduction
When Does the Future Begin?
Thinking About Time, Appropriating the Future: A Global Perspective
    
Part I. Green Growth and Forced Labour, 12th-19th Centuries
1: Indispensable Labour, Forced Labour
Too Many People?
Where’s the Capital?
A Law for the Masters
Global Economic Growth

2: Energy Resources in Pre-Industrial Economies
Wood and Coal
Wind and Seawater
Rivers Like No Others
Animal and Human Power

3: Crops and Material Culture
Wheat: The Wrong Right Answer
Hybridisation or Perhaps Not: Pasta
Many Rice Varieties, Not Just in Asia
Afro-American Maize
“Noble” Cane: Our Sweet Tooth, a Rod for Their Backs

4: A Dangerous Mix: Environment, Institutions and Inequality
Little Ice Age and the Collapse of Agrarian Empires
The Price is Right! Regulating Markets
Meat: A Scarce Food
Part I Conclusion: Why Europe? The Power of Violence and Constraint

Part II. The Productivist Regime and the Great Acceleration, 1870-1970
5: The Age of Capital
The Architecture of Competition
What the Modernisation of Agriculture Really Means
Creative Destruction? Chemicals in Food Production
Smog in the Global North, Flogging in the South: A New Energy Equilibrium

6: Seeds, Plants, and Genetics
Hybrid Maize: Miraculous Yields and Economic Dependence
Rice and Floods
Wheat: Standardization at the Expense of Nutrition

7: Transmissible Diseases and Food: Meat
Meat for All, but at What Cost?
Swine Trichinosis: Protectionism or Health Crisis?
An Epidemic without Borders: Bovine Tuberculosis
Conclusion: Epizootic to Zoonotic, the Pendulum Swings

8: Capital, Neo-Colonialism and Famine
Capital and Markets: Allegro Ma Non Troppo
Nouveaux Riches and Permanent Outsiders
Colonial Famines
Part II Conclusion

Part III. From the 1970s to 2050: High Globalisation, Collapse and the World After
9: Neoliberalism and the Euphoria of Speculation
Das Kapital Moves South
Energy Sources in the Age of Globalisation
Ever-Increasing Yields: The End of Illusions

10: Hunting for Seed Varieties vs. Genetic Selection
From Hybrids to GMOs
Seeds and Intellectual Property: Breaking the Link
Breeding Wipes Out Everything in Its Path
Why Can’t We Live Without Meat?
The Boomerang Effect: Mad Cow Disease, Avian Flu and Covid
Babette’s Feast

11: Towards the World After
An Ideal World in the Past?
Green Taxation vs. Inequalities
Should We Get Out of Capitalism?
Put an End to Speculation
Seeds and Intellectual Property: Breaking the Link
Restoring the Centrality of Labour

Conclusion: Just Institutions vs. Just Societies


Alessandro Stanziani is Professor at the EHESS and CNRS in Paris.
Thomas Piketty is Professor of Economics at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales.



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