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Half a century ago, many democratic states started to respond to environmental pressures that had arisen in the wake of rapid industrialization. They set up environmental ministries and agencies and issued legislation to control the pollution of air and water and to manage industrial processes, wastes and toxic substances. This was the birth of the environmental state. With planetary ecological challenges like climate change spiraling out of control and dwarfing the environmental state’s classical tasks of environmental management, new questions about the transformative capacities of the state are becoming acute today. How large is the state’s capability to transform enhanced industrial societies into sustainable post-carbon societies? Do its new environmental functions empower the state to prioritise ecological goals over economic growth? Can the state’s environmental management capabilities be radicalised to turn it into a ‘sustainability state’? Can democracies be enhanced to enlarge the state’s transformative capacities? The Political Prospects of a Sustainability Transformation: Moving Beyond the Environmental State explores these and other questions from a variety of theoretical and empirical angles, covering the fields of democratic theory, theories of the state, political economy, political sociology, rhetoric and political philosophy.The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the journal Environmental Politics.
Daniel Hausknost is Assistant Professor in Politics at the Institute of Social Change and Sustainability at the Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria.Marit Hammond is Lecturer in Politics at the School of Social, Political and Global Studies, Keele University, UK.
PrefaceMarit Hammond and Daniel HausknostIntroductionDaniel Hausknost and Marit Hammond1. The environmental state and the glass ceiling of transformationDaniel Hausknost2. The legitimation crisis of democracy: emancipatory politics, the environmental state and the glass ceiling to socio-ecological transformationIngolfur Blühdorn3. The ‘glass ceiling’ of the environmental state and the social denial of mortalityRichard McNeill Douglas4. The environmental state between pre-emption and inoperosityLuigi Pellizzoni5. Inventing the environmental state: neoliberal common sense and the limits to transformationSophia Hatzisavvidou6. The state in the transformation to a sustainable postgrowth economyMax Koch7. Potential for a radical policy-shift? The acceptability of strong sustainable consumption governance among elitesSanna Ahvenharju8. Democracy, disagreement, disruption: agonism and the environmental stateAmanda Machin9. Sustainability as a cultural transformation: the role of deliberative democracyMarit Hammond