Between an Ice Road and a Ring of Fire • Gemma Boothroyd
The Ring of Fire development is a social and environmental calamity dressed up as economic necessity—and a continuation of Canada's long colonial history.
The Ring of Fire development is a social and environmental calamity dressed up as economic necessity—and a continuation of Canada's long colonial history.
An exclusive extract from Wim Carton and Andreas Malm’s latest book, The Long Heat (Verso, 2026)
The far right has long portrayed itself as the defender of a pristine nature against urban corruption, but its history in the British countryside tells a far more complex story about nationalism and rural life.
“The stakes have changed fundamentally” – Harj Narulla on the ICJ’s climate ruling
Jason Hickel speaks to Andrew Ahern about the last five years of debating degrowth.
How we can live together without exploiting each other? This is the work of socialising nature.
Insecure housing systems and growing environmental pressures concern the same buildings and the same people — and cannot be understood separately.
Past and present energy transitions have been motivated by the political and economic aims of industry and government. At the same time, they create new opportunities for labour mobilisation.
Market-based climate policy — which strives to replace politics with “precision" — has failed. We need transformative, democratic solutions to address the climate crisis.