Care Lessons for the Climate Endgame
During the climate endgame, our survival hinges on rebuilding the systems of interdependence that make life in the ruins possible.
During the climate endgame, our survival hinges on rebuilding the systems of interdependence that make life in the ruins possible.
Adrienne Buller speaks to Alyssa Battistoni about value, the politics of nature, and how we might live freely in a finite world.
Adrienne Buller speaks to Amir Lebdioui about development economics, tariff wars and what we could be learning from China.
Stuart Hall’s politics of culture offers the left a blueprint for confronting the climate crisis.
Editor Adrienne Buller speaks to Sabrina Fernandes about the complexities of Brazilian ecological politics at the start of the COP30 climate conference.
In Argentina, economic chaos and political upheaval expose how the IMF's promise of stability has become an instrument of managed decline.
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, out 7 October from Verso Books.
In the trade-offs between decarbonization and human and ecological impact, how do we determine which costs are bearable, or inescapable, even necessary—and who gets to make these decisions?
Thea Riofrancos speaks to The BREAK—DOWN about the rise of the lithium industry, the geopolitics of extraction and the frontiers of green capitalism.
In Brazil, big agribusiness holds the reins of political power. Without confronting this head-on, Lula’s ecological promises will remain just that—promises.
As temperatures rise and the Arctic thaws, capital is eyeing new opportunities: for extraction, for shipping and for extending a lifeline to business as usual.