What is ecosocialism?
Part 1 – Ecological disaster and capitalism
The disaster and the threat of a cataclysm today.
• Climate Change
• Accelerated decline in biodiversity
• Changes in land use
• Changes in the biogeochemical cycles of nitrogen and phosphorus.
• Freshwater consumption and impact on the hydrological cycle
• Introduction of new entities
• Oceans and cryosphere
• Atmospheric aerosol load.
The history of capitalism is the history of ecological devastation/appropriation
• Enclosures in medieval England.
• Mercantilism and the first steps towards environmental destruction.
• The first industrial revolution and the turning point towards the modern ecological crisis.
• Oil, petrochemicals, electricity: the second industrial revolution.
• Nuclear power and mass consumption: thirty ‘glorious’ years?
• The neoliberal turning point.
• Enclosures: the return!
Part 2 – Ecology and emancipation
• Contributions and contradictions of Marxism
• About progress
• Decolonial ecologies, indigenism.
• Feminist contributions.
Part 3 – Manifesto for an ecosocialist revolution
• The historical crisis of the socialist alternative
• Why ecosocialist?
• What kind of degrowth?
• Are we idealists? Utopians?
• Our transitional approach
• What strategy?
Manifesto for an ecosocialist revolution – Break with capitalist growth [1]