We’re All Climate Hypocrites Now
109 pages
English

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109 pages
English

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Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

  • Co-op available
  • Galleys available to sales reps, trade publications, and long-lead media
  • Digital galleys on Edelweiss
  • National advertising
    • Google, Facebook, Amazon
  • National radio and podcast campaign
    • NPR, Hot Take podcast
  • National print campaign
    • Sierra, Green America, Yes!, Mother Jones, Grist, Treehugger, Medium, The New Yorker, Green Lifestyle
  • Online/social media campaign
    • A+ page on Amazon
    • Livestream event and giveaway with author
    • Promotion via author's networks including Twitter, Medium, Treehugger, MNN
    • Outreach to organizations and groups like Greenpeace USA, Resilience.org, Dogwood Alliance
    • Promotion on New Society Publishers social media platforms including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, our blog, Pinterest, Instagram, in-house newsletter, and YouTube
  • General eBook marketing plans
    • eBook will be available at the same time as print publication to maximize sales.
    • eBook ISBN will be included on all press materials, author and publisher websites, and whenever print ISBN is listed.
    • Publisher and author will be promoting both e and p through social media.
  • Excerpts in
    • Yes!, Sierra, Green America, Treehugger, Medium, Mother Nature Network

  • Author is communication specialist and well-known green lifestyle blogger published on Treehugger.org, Mother Nature Network, and Medium
  • He works as the Brand Development Manager for the Redwoods Group and previously worked as creative director for Burt's Bees, Larry's Coffee, and Jada Pinkett Smith.
  • A self-confessed eco-hypcrite, he has been an environmental activist since his teens.
  • In this book, he takes a tongue-in-cheek look at the environmental movement, celebrating successes and offering practical pathways for actually making a difference
  • The author includes stories of ecoactivists and their struggle to make a difference.
  • Similar to Inconspicuous Consumption by Tatiana Schlossberg, The Uninhabitable Earth by David Wallace-Wells, and There Is No Planet B by Mike Berners-Lee, this book helps the reader think about their own power to bring about change.
  • Differs from other books on this topic
    • Examines the argument between individual action versus systemic change
    • Helps the reader identify areas in their lives where change will have the greatest impact and focus on areas where they have specific leverage

Audience

  • Climate active people who are aware and informed of the crisis we are in and already already taking action,
  • Professional environmentalists in non-profits and businesses
  • Members of groups seeking to address the crisis (eg The Sunrise Movement, School Strikes for Climate etc)
  • Readers interested in climate change

Academic

Supplementary text for courses in environmental studies, geography and related courses

  • University of Nevada, Reno

Regional

  • Well known in Asheville, NC and would like to do book events here
  • Adopted hometown is Durham, NC
  • Indianapolis - in laws

International

  • Briston, UK - birthplace and still has good connections there

Locations included in book:

  • Hull, UK - author also studied there
  • Hebden Bridge, UK
  • Helsinki and Oulu, Finland - relatives and possible speaking events

Canada

  • Toronto - Lloyd Alter from Treehugger will be helping to promote the book

A useful — and sprightly! — effort to get at the choice between individual and systemic action on the greatest problem we've ever faced. — Bill McKibben, author, The End of Nature


Taking a tongue-in-cheek approach, self-confessed eco-hypocrite Sami Grover says we should do what we can in our own lives to minimize our climate impacts and we need to target those actions so they create systemic change. We're All Climate Hypocrites Now helps you decide what are the most important climate actions to take for your own personal situation.


Our culture tells us that personal responsibility is central to tackling the climate emergency, yet the choices we make are often governed by the systems in which we live. Whether it's activists facing criticism for eating meat or climate scientists catching flack for flying, accusations of hypocrisy are rampant. And they come from both inside and outside the movement.


Sami Grover skewers those pointing fingers, celebrates those who are trying, and offers practical pathways to start making a difference. We're All Climate Hypocrites Now covers:


  • How environmentalism lost its groove

  • Why big polluters want to talk about your carbon footprint

  • The psychology of shaming

  • How businesses can find their activist voice

  • The true power of individuals to spark widespread change.


By understanding where our greatest leverage lies, we can prioritize our actions, maximize our impact, and join forces with the millions of other imperfect individuals who are ready to do their part and actually change the system.


Acknowledgments: An Incomplete Catalog of Gushing Praise and Profuse Thanks


Preface: The Night I Went Drinking and the World Fell Apart

A Gradual Social Reckoning

Action Is Contagious Too

Getting to the Point


1. We're All Climate Hypocrites Now

What Does 'Hypocrite' Even Mean?

Rational Choice Is No Choice At All

Undermining the Messenger

A Convenient Mistruth

Eco-Moralism Runs Deep

Nothing's Ever Easy

The Limits of Personal Responsibility

Why Individual Action Still Matters


2. Wants and Needs

Voting and Shopping Are Not the Same Thing

The Irrational Consumer

Behavior Is About Design

The Roles We Play

Abstinence Is Still Individualism

Finding a Bigger Political Canvas


3. How "Green" Lost Its Groove

Dilution of a Movement

A Missed Opportunity

The Rise of Eco-Individualism

The Real Value of Lifestyle Activism

Exposing the Challenges


4. Enough Already

The Emergence of a Movement

Identifying the Culprits

The Rebels Are Angry

Who Is Holding Us Back?

The Personal Is Political (As Long As You Make It So)

A Latent Force


5. Guilt Trip

Eating Our Own

Undermining a Hero

The Power of Shaming

Shaping Cultural Norms

Preserving a Formidable Tool

The New Pariahs

Peer Pressure for the Win

Guilt Is Good?

Values Are a Moving Target


6. Big Oil Wants to Talk About Your Carbon Footprint

Some Are More Responsible Than Others

The Tobacco Playbook

They've Never Been the Good Guys

Deflating the Carbon Bubble

Can Big Oil "Go Green"?

A Missed Opportunity

Balancing on the High Wire

Coal as the Canary

A Tenacious Grip on Power


7. Corporate "Citizenship" Reimagined

"Responsible" Versus "Sustainable"

Corporate Citizenship — For Real

A Different Kind of Insurance

Beyond Corporate Responsibility

A Different Type of Shareholder Primacy?

Benefit Corporations Step Up

The Power of Corporate Activism

Beware the Benign Benefactor

Capitalists Against Unbridled Capitalism?


8. Swimming Upstream

"You Are Definitely Going to Die"

Meeting People Where They Are

Changing the Direction of the Current

Modeling What's Possible

Subsidizing the Incumbents

The Destructive as the Default

Writing a Different Story

A More Interesting Conversation


9. Focus, Goddammit

An Effective Exercise in Distraction

Attention Is a Limited Resource

First Things First

The Beginning of the End of Coal

Being "Better"

Meat Eaters and Vegetarians Unite

The System Responds

The Cheapest Way to Fry

The Growth of Flygskam

An Inclusive Conversation?


10. What Difference Does It Make?

Organized Resistance

Historical Serendipity

The Real Power of the Individual

A Reckoning on Race

It's Not About Me (Or You)

The Lure of Agency

How Change Actually Happens

What's My Duty?

Shifting Our Collective Values


11. Climate Hypocrites Unite!

A False Dawn

The Power of Imperfection

Finding Our Place


Coda: The Journey Down, Together


What Next? Resources, Organizations, and Actions

Knowledge Is Power

Get Organized

Rethink Your Mobility

Eat Smarter

Good Energy

Money Matters


Notes

Index

About the Author

About New Society Publishers

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 21 septembre 2021
Nombre de lectures 1
EAN13 9781771423496
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1000€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Praise for We re All Climate Hypocrites Now
A useful - and sprightly! - effort to get at the choice between individual and systemic action on the greatest problem we ve ever faced. I found it a helpful spur to creative thinking and action, and I bet you will as well. Read it, and then get out there and change the politics and economics that are driving us towards - well, if not hell, then a place with a similar temperature.
- Bill McKibben, author, The End of Nature
We re All Climate Hypocrites Now is part eco-therapy, part climate strategy, and a fantastic antidote to the overwhelm that comes along with living in a global ecological crisis. Say goodbye to those little voices in your head (or those loud voices on Facebook) calling you a hypocrite because you don t bike to work, aren t vegan, fly to a protest, and still haven t taken out that loan for those rooftop solar panels. This book is a fresh and informative unpacking of why we must abandon the notion that individual eco-perfection is possible - or even impactful - in the absence of system-wide change. It s an inspiring call to let go of the either or mentality, to fully embrace the both and, and to remember to go easy on ourselves and each other as we lean in even further into this painful, chaotic yet exciting time of (r)evolution.
- Danna Smith, executive director, Dogwood Alliance
Sami Grover s wise book charts a middle way to win transformational change. He challenges us to embrace our climate hypocrisy as a goal to uproot the structures that are killing the planet without losing sight of the strategic individual actions we can take right now. We can t curate our way out of the climate crisis as consumers - we must replace the system that makes us climate hypocrites. We climate hypocrites have agency, in varying degrees, to take actions that multiplied by the millions will help to win the big changes we need to survive. With our eyes on the stars and our feet on the ground, we can meet ourselves where we are without guilt and act for a more equitable, just, and sustainable world. Let this book show you how.
- Bill Corcoran, Sierra Club s Beyond Coal campaign
What a great book. Grover pushes well beyond BTUs and solar installs to confront shame, duplicity, and the multi-ality of being human. It s daring, bold, and wonderfully provocative. One moment I m hoping he buys the new crepe pan, the next I m staring in the mirror thinking about my wasteful habits. It s a great read with an epic span - from the morality of procreation to a wheelbarrow of horse shit and back again. Loved it.
- Lyle Estill, author, Small Is Possible , grandparent, distiller
If you are a climate concerned person who struggles with the nuanced complexity of being green, Sami s book will help you navigate this contemporary moral maze with intelligent bigger picture thinking plus a rich seam of strategies and initiatives large and small for a healthier planet.
- Maddy Harland, co-founder editor, Permaculture Magazine , author, Fertile Edges
Nobody knows more about the business of sustainability than Sami Grover. He brings a welcome dose of wit, clarity, and levity to the green movement.
- Brian Merchant, best-selling author, The One Device
On every page of this rip-roaring read I found myself, my partner, my neighbour, my colleagues, my family, and my friends and every holier-than-thou temptation, every emptying out of the compost bin, every person who berated me for traveling for work with refugees. Hypocrisy is in our DNA, and in this book it is both hilariously observed, with all the dry wit of a Brit, and pragmatically harnessed for good. I honestly could not put it down. It s a tour de force for hope. And kindness. And love for the world and the future.
- Alison Phipps, UNESCO Chair for Refugee Integration through Languages and the Arts, University of Glasgow
Grover s nuanced take on how to approach life at the end of the world - with thoughtfulness, honesty, and more than a touch of pragmatism - gives even the most jaded amongst us a boost of energy to do our part in extending the health of the planet, for as long as we can. While he turns to science, public commentary, experts, and activists to remind us that individual energies and collective action can produce results, what makes We re All Climate Hypocrites Now is Grover s willingness to put himself squarely in the middle of these debates, engaging with his own evolution as a climate activist, and evaluating and reevaluating his own practices. The honesty with which he writes is an invitation, rather than an edict, to join him in making a difference.
- Dr. Kumarini Silva, associate professor, Communication and Cultural Studies, UNC-Chapel Hill, author, Brown Threat
Sami Grover s We re All Climate Hypocrites Now is an enjoyable, well-timed tonic for often-bitter debates about whether a focus on personal emissions helps or hurts societal efforts to stop the climate crisis. His proposal is to repurpose Big Oil s buck passing carbon footprint into a tool to identify your own specific leverage to create wider social change. A thinking person s call to action, best enjoyed with a cold, well-crafted American beer.
- Dr. Dan Rutherford, Aviation Director, International Council on Clean Transportation
As someone who teaches environmental advocacy, I know the paralysis, guilt, and self-blame that sometimes hits us when the odds seem insurmountable, and Grover s book is a great antidote. Grover reminds us that the social, economic, and political roots of climate change are broad and deep, but so are the solutions. With in-depth interviews and entertaining anecdotes, he shows us how climate scientists, activists, and advocates are finding ways to address the myriad problems that are linked to the unfolding climate crisis. Grover s candid and upbeat approach offers a fresh and inspiring take on climate action that will become required reading in my courses.
- Dr. David Monje, assistant professor, co-director, UNC s Program for Cultural Studies
A thought-provoking, insightful, and witty exploration of the familiar dilemmas we face navigating the world of climate solutions, from personal choices to systemic change, and the interplay between the two.
- Andreas Karelas, founder and executive director, RE-volv, author, Climate Courage
Over the years, many have struggled mightily to find a place of balance and comfort in the pursuit of personal accountability in their individual lives, while addressing the ultimate solutions needed to conquer the carbon crisis, which is at the root of climate change. Sami highlights a multitude of actions on a variety of scales that trigger this consternation while appropriately calling-out the systems of greatest causation where the focus belongs. His wit, insightfulness, and informed knowledge is refreshing and on full display. Sami s judge not, that you be not judged accounts in the book are humorous, thought provoking, and profound. We re All Climate Hypocrites Now is a must read for all climate change warriors.
- Joe Jackson, board vice chair, Dogwood Alliance, founder, EcoGrounds Management Systems
We re All Climate Hypocrites Now
How Embracing Our Limitations Can Unlock the Power of a Movement
Sami Grover
Copyright 2021 by Sami Grover. All rights reserved.
Cover design by Diane McIntosh.
Cover images: iStock
Printed in Canada. First printing September 2021.
This book is intended to be educational and informative. It is not intended to serve as a guide. The author and publisher disclaim all responsibility for any liability, loss or risk that may be associated with the application of any of the contents of this book.
Inquiries regarding requests to reprint all or part of We re All Climate Hypocrites Now should be addressed to New Society Publishers at the address below.
To order directly from the publishers, please call toll-free (North America) 1-800-567-6772, or order online at www.newsociety.com
Any other inquiries can be directed by mail to:
New Society Publishers
P.O. Box 189, Gabriola Island, BC V0R 1X0, Canada
(250) 247-9737
L IBRARY AND A RCHIVES C ANADA C ATALOGUING IN P UBLICATION
Title: We re All climate hypocrites now : how embracing our limitations can unlock the power of a movement / Sami Grover.
Other titles: We are all climate hypocrites now
Names: Grover, Sami, author.
Description: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: Canadiana (print) 20210265116 | Canadiana (ebook) 20210265183 | ISBN 9780865719606
(softcover) | ISBN 9781550927535 (PDF) | ISBN 9781771423496 (EPUB)
Subjects: LCSH: Environmental responsibility. | LCSH: Environmental protection-Citizen participation. | LCSH: Environmentalism.
Classification: LCC GE195.7 .G76 2021 | DDC 363.7-dc23
New Society Publishers mission is to publish books that contribute in fundamental ways to building an ecologically sustainable and just society, and to do so with the least possible impact on the environment, in a manner that models this vision.
For Lilia, Adeline, and Jenni. You re why I do what I do. (Now turn out the bloody lights.)
Contents
Acknowledgments: An Incomplete Catalog of Gushing Praise and Profuse Thanks
Preface: The Night I Went Drinking and the World Fell Apart
A Gradual Social Reckoning
Action Is Contagious Too
Getting to the Point
1. We re All Climate Hypocrites Now
What Does Hypocrite Even Mean?
Rational Choice Is No Choice At All
Undermining the Messenger
A Convenient Mistruth
Eco-Moralism Runs Deep
Nothing s Ever Easy
The Limits of Personal Responsibility
Why Individual Action Still Matters
2. Wants and Needs
Voting and Shopping Are Not the Same Thing
The Irrational Consumer
Behavior Is About Design
The Roles We Play
Abstinence Is Still Individualism
Finding a Bigger Political Canvas
3. How Green Lost Its Groove
Dilution of a Movement
A Missed Opportunity
The Rise of Eco-Individualism
The Real Value

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