
Planet Dialectics: Explorations in Environment and Development
Wolfgang Sachs
All effects of human action will inevitably be played out within our planet’s limits; any hope of infinity is an illusion. And yet, as Wolfgang Sachs warned almost twenty years ago, environmental concerns have been assimilated into the rhetoric, dynamics and power structures of development.
This classic collection of trenchant and elegant explorations addresses the crisis of the Western world’s relations with nature and social justice. Examining the notions of efficiency, speed, globalization and development, Sachs shows that sustainability, truly conceived, is incompatible with the worldwide rule of economism.
Planet Dialectics reveals that the Western development model is fundamentally at odds with both the quest for justice among the world’s people and the aspiration to reconcile humanity and nature.
Product Details
About Wolfgang Sachs
Reviews for Planet Dialectics: Explorations in Environment and Development
New Internationalist
A remarkable book... well written, full of food for thought... It should attract a wide readership among students dealing with development, environment, globalization and planning issues.
Progress in Development Studies
Still remarkably fresh and insightful, Planet Dialectics gives us a much needed critique of economics gone wrong.
Camilla Toulmin, director of the International Institute for Environment and Development
Brings together insights from anthropology, history, economics, cultural studies and environmental science to show that the rapidly expanding global market economy is designed to benefit only the few... and will inevitably cause disastrous environmental overshoot... Planet Dialectics is an impressive book.
David Mittler in Resurgence
If you are not only concerned with the future of our planet but also with social justice, you have to read this book.
Gilbert Rist, author of The History of Development and The Delusions of Economics
Remains an essential read for anyone involved in the field of development. This book has never been more vital than today.
Jonathan Ensor, Stockholm Environment Institute
Sachs elegantly reminds us that in the search for justice to people and planet we need to begin "civilization change" by changing the rich, not the poor.
Professor Julian Agyeman, Tufts University.
Wise words, crafted with loving care for people and the planet, even more relevant than when they were written a quarter century ago, unfortunately.
Professor Richard Norgaard, University of California, Berkeley
Amazingly innovative in its perspective, unflinching in its analysis, and radical in its solutions, this book is a historic hallmark.
Tilman Santarius, Germanwatch