Buch, Englisch, 226 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm
Labour, Skill and the Changing Climate
Buch, Englisch, 226 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm
Reihe: Routledge Explorations in Environmental Studies
ISBN: 978-1-032-84325-4
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Working through Planetary Breakdown offers a genuinely interdisciplinary engagement with the future of paid and unpaid work in the context of the twin challenges of decarbonisation and the growing impacts of an unstable climate.
It is innovative in its grounding of such discussions in the everyday realities of workers’ experiences with an empirical focus on skill, occupational shifts and technological change at the workplace level. Part I: Skills and Training delves into how workers gain crucial skills across their lifetimes. From survivalist ‘preppers’ to local microgrid operators, the chapters reveal practical and often unrecognised but essential expertise. Case studies include air-conditioning technical educators and construction trades leveraging tacit knowledge of sustainable practices. Part II: Industrial Transformation draws on empirical studies from coal mining, manufacturing, defence and construction to highlight workers’ experiences of climate shifts, heat and industrial transition. Theoretical contributions explore novel legal strategies such as fossil fuel “cessation” and examine the role of health and safety frameworks in addressing worker democracy and climate change mitigation.
This collection will resonate with scholars, students, policymakers and trade unionists interested in environmental labour studies, just transitions and the future of work. It offers vital lessons for navigating complex industrial transformations.
Key Features:
· Detailed case studies in critical sectors such as energy, construction, defence and manufacturing;
· A dynamic interdisciplinary fusion of human geography, political economy, sociology, industrial relations and law;
· Emphasis on worker agency, practical skill, and grassroots adaptability amid intensifying climate impacts.
Keywords:
climate change, skill, industrial labour, just transitions, industrial transition, technological change, environmental labour studies, political economy, manufacturing, defence, construction, preppers, decarbonisation, work health and safety, industrial law, mitigation, adaptation
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate and Undergraduate Advanced
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Skill, industrial transformation and work in a climate changing world PART I: SKILLS and TRAINING 1.“What’s your apocalypse skill?”: Revaluing Flexible Skills for the Apocalyptic Good-Life 2. Localising the Operation of Grid-Tied Microgrids for Future Resilience 3. Navigating Skills in Uncertain Energy Futures: Education, Skills and Training for the Australian Air-Conditioning Workforce 4. Quiet Sustainability: Tacit Knowledge and Emic Capacities in Building and Construction 5. “Creative technicians” and “technical creatives”: Transferable Skills for Challenging Times PART II: INDUSTRIAL TRANSFORMATION 6. A Transition with Teeth: Reconfiguring the Concept of Just Transition to Recognise the Imperative of Fossil Fuel Cessation 7. Place-Sensitive Approaches to Coal Transitions in Australia 8.Industrial Democracy and Climate Struggle: The Limits and Possibilities of Using Health and Safety Committees to Promote Industrial Democracy and Address Climate Change 9. Hot Under the PPE Collar: Occupational High Heat During the Covid-19 Pandemic 10. Industrial Control and Capitalist Inefficiency: Manufacturing Workforce Development in the Polycrisis 11. From Occupational Steering to Occupational Citizenship? Understanding Career Pathways After the Demise of Australian Automotive Manufacturing