Book contents
- There Is No Planet B
- Reviews
- There Is No Planet B
- Copyright page
- Additional material
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- What’s New in this Updated Edition?
- Introduction to the First Edition
- 1 Food
- 2 More on Climate and Environment
- 3 Energy
- 4 Travel and Transport
- 5 Growth, Money and Metrics
- 6 People and Work
- 7 Business and Technology
- 8 Values, Truth and Trust
- 9 Thinking Skills for Today’s World
- 10 Protest
- 11 Big-Picture Summary
- 12 What Can I Do?
- Appendix: Climate Emergency Basics
- Alphabetical Quick Tour
- Notes on Units
- EndNotes
- Index
12 - What Can I Do?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 January 2021
- There Is No Planet B
- Reviews
- There Is No Planet B
- Copyright page
- Additional material
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- What’s New in this Updated Edition?
- Introduction to the First Edition
- 1 Food
- 2 More on Climate and Environment
- 3 Energy
- 4 Travel and Transport
- 5 Growth, Money and Metrics
- 6 People and Work
- 7 Business and Technology
- 8 Values, Truth and Trust
- 9 Thinking Skills for Today’s World
- 10 Protest
- 11 Big-Picture Summary
- 12 What Can I Do?
- Appendix: Climate Emergency Basics
- Alphabetical Quick Tour
- Notes on Units
- EndNotes
- Index
Summary
When the challenges are so global, and each one of us so small, it can be tempting, but wrong, to think that there is nothing an individual can do to help humans to get a grip. To do so is a cop out. It is one form of human denial of the Anthropocene challenge. The global and systemic nature of our situation does have huge implications for the roles of individuals, organisations and even states. It is true that systemic adjustments can completely undo the direct benefits of many piecemeal actions. So, we need to see everything we do as part of a bigger game.
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- There Is No Planet BA Handbook for the Make or Break Years – Updated Edition, pp. 225 - 228Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021