000 01699nam a22002177a 4500
001 46906
003 OSt
005 20240410102457.0
008 240410b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aBARRY Ben
245 _aStranger than fiction:
_bimagining our climate future/
_cBen Barry and Jeffrey Mazo
260 _c2021
520 _aIn How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, Bill Gates shows why a net-zero world is necessary, and how it might be achieved through fostering demand for and the supply of innovation. He argues that technology, policy and markets must be shaped at the same time, and in the same direction. His technocratic approach ignores (explicitly) climate politics and (implicitly) the second-order consequences (including social disruption and violence) of political and technological innovation. Kim Stanley Robinson’s novel The Ministry for the Future offers an all-too-plausible example of how today’s climate emergency and attempts to address it might give rise to armed action by insurgent groups, international organisations and governments, and even a transnational insurgency against climate change itself. These complementary portrayals of the path to a sustainable industrial ecosystem for the planet are unlikely to resemble the true course of events in detail, but they may in spirit.
598 _aCLIMATE DISASTER, CLIMATE CHANGE, NEWARTICLS
650 _aCLIMATE DISASTER
650 _aCLIMATE CHANGE
700 _aMAZO Jeffrey
773 _gSurvival: Volume 63, Number 6, December 2021-January 2022, page: 201-208
856 _uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00396338.2021.2006460
_zClick here for full text
942 _2ddc
_cARTICLE
_n0
999 _c46906
_d46906