And no doubt Tom was influenced by
the radical social climate of the sixties when he wrote this.
Not exact matches
B. R. A. C. E., MASS MoCA is Part II of Bifurcated
Radical Anarchist Cultural Enterprise, or B. R. A. C. E. a
social project intended to change the unjust sociopolitical
climate of the United States.
Unfolding in two parts throughout 2018, «Be Not Still: Living in Uncertain Times» addresses concerns of the present
social and political
climate through a
radical new model of experimentation and inquiry.
«Egalitarian communitarians,» by the same logic, readily embrace the most dire
climate - change forecasts because they perceive exactly the same thing but take delight at the prospect of
radical limits on commerce, industry, and markets, which in their eyes are the source of myriad
social inequities.
After 23 years of United Nations summits on
climate change, the time has come for
radical thinking and
radical action — a
social movement with the power to demand a better future.
But
climate science now shows that the situation has become so urgent, and the forecasts so dire, that only
radical social and economic transformation will give us a chance of avoiding dramatic and irreversible changes to the global
climate.
This book shines a fascinating light on this process by revealing how
climate change has been transformed from a physical phenomenon, measurable and observable by scientists, into a
social, cultural and political one... This book is so important because Mike Hulme can not be dismissed as a skeptic yet he is calling for a
radical change in the way we discuss
climate change.