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Shared pretenses for collective inaction: the economic growth imperative, COVID-19, and climate change

Diana Stuart, Brian Petersen, Ryan Gunderson

2021Globalizations23 citationsDOI

Abstract

This paper examines how the economic growth imperative not only drives climate change and created the conditions for the development and spread of the COVID-19 pandemic but is also the context for climate change inaction and ineffective responses to the pandemic. Focusing on the United States, the paper identifies pretenses for collective inaction on COVID-19 that are similar in content to familiar justifications for delay in climate action: (1) denialism, (2) individualism, and (3) techno-optimism. These justifications must be identified as strategies to maintain the status-quo and benefit the wealthy few while allowing avoidable human suffering and loss. Adequately addressing climate change and future pandemics requires overcoming these false narratives and transitioning to social conditions that are resilient, healthy, and sustainable – specifically conditions where social and ecological well-being are prioritized over economic growth for the sake of profit maximization.

Topics & Concepts

Climate changeCollective actionDegrowthOptimismEconomicsContext (archaeology)Status quoPolitical economy of climate changePandemicCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Development economicsPolitical economyPolitical scienceSustainabilityEnvironmental ethicsPoliticsMarket economyGeographySocial psychologyEcologyLawPsychologyDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)ArchaeologyPathologyPhilosophyMedicineBiologyClimate Change and Health ImpactsClimate Change and GeoengineeringGlobal Energy and Sustainability Research
Shared pretenses for collective inaction: the economic growth imperative, COVID-19, and climate change | Litcius