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CUSP Newsletter, December 2023

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

Welcome to the December edition of our CUSP Newsletter.



As CoP28 wrangles over the difference between phasing out and phasing down, it’s a good point to reflect on a year that’s been notable for phasing in (or should it be up?) a more serious attention to postgrowth ideas and thinking.



Questioning growth was probably never going to be front and centre in Dubai. But elsewhere things were different. Even as CoP was in full flow, CUSP was engaged on the issue in Paris with both the Ministry of the Economy and the Banque de France. Those high-profile conversations came at the end of a year which has featured our involvement with the Irish President, with the Icelandic Prime Minister, with an Early Day Motion in the UK and with the EU’s extraordinary Beyond Growth conference in Brussels. Witnessing the ferocious energy of young climate activists there was both wonderful and daunting. When a history of the postgrowth movement comes to be written, the year 2023 will have to feature somewhere.



With so much going on, it’s easy to forget that our role in CUSP is to advance the science of all that as well as engage in the process of change. But that’s always been our strength. And this year it was no different. We’ve curated two extensive handbooks, one on Green Finance and the other on Pro-Environmental Behaviour Change, contributed to a new Encyclopedia of Ecological Economics, published papers on natural capital markets, on flow, on neoliberalism, on anxiety, on Baumol’s cost disease, on the North South divide, on changing cultural practice, on embedding sustainability in education, and on the role of financial regulators in the net zero transition amongst many more.



Our wide-ranging blog series has remained as active as ever. Recent highlights include contributions on 'positive tipping points', advertising, on the rolling back of net zero policies in the UK, on raising degrowth to the next level and on the extraordinary example of a poet imprisoned for protesting the destruction of nature.



We’ve also been delighted to continue our support for the Climate Parenting podcast series, Mum, will the planet die before I do?, curated by Katy Glassborow and Babita Sharma. This second series included interviews with Clive Lewis MP, Nadia Whittome MP, Guy Singh-Watson, and Lucy Siegle. Needless to say, we’ve also participated in numerous podcasts ourselves, including a gripping narrative podcast series called The Water We Swim In, a brand new C40 Cities podcast series on Neoliberalism and its Discontents, and the somewhat extraordinary vox.com excursion into postgrowth territory. (I have never been trolled so profoundly in my life as I was when that episode dropped!)



As the popularity of face-to-face begins to rise again, we’ve been pleased to co-host a well-attended workshop, jointly organised with Lund University on postgrowth business and are looking forward to our Post-CoP 28 seminar What’s Next for Sustainable Consumption, to be held on 15th December in London. And our home-grown interactive installation the People’s Palace of Possibility went on tour across the UK. More details of all these engagements and more can be found on our website.



Finally, I was delighted to be able to find time during a busy year to record personally the audiobook version of Post Growth – life after capitalism, with the invaluable help of Jen Hinton and her team at Sound Understanding.



We wish you well for the holiday season and as usual welcome your thoughts, reflections or questions about our work.



Best wishes

Tim



Prof Tim Jackson

CUSP Director

Post Growth now as Audiobook, narrated by Tim Jackson

We are pleased to announce the release of the audiobook edition of Tim Jackson's prize winning Post Growth—Life After Capitalism. Through his own narration, Tim brings a personal touch to the profound themes of Post Growth, offering an accessible and engaging experience for audiences to absorb his insights on the go.

Who can afford to go green? Hard-pressed consumers are pushing back

CNN Business piece in the run up to CoP28, discussing costs of climate policies in the context of social and economic justice.

Are young people poised to slam the brake on endless economic growth?

"The climate and cost of living crises make belief in expanding GDPs look as stale as last year’s mince pies." The Guardian featuring postgrowth economics.

Blame Capitalism—Vox’s #TodayExplained with Tim Jackson

Vox.com podcast series with CUSP Director Tim Jackson investigating the ailing capitalist model in the US, and how postgrowth economics and policy making is coming into play.

Growth and climate—French Ministry of Economy and Finance event

Hosted by Minister Bruno Le Maire, speakers of the day included CUSP director Tim Jackson, Sandrine Dixson-Declève, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, and Bill Gates.

Evidencing the outsourcing of social care provision in England

CUSP partnering with University of Oxford in new database development project, enabling in-depth investigation of the impact of outsourcing social care provision to private providers in England.

Handbook on Pro-Environmental Behaviour Change | Edited Collection

This timely Handbook co-edited by Birgitta Gatersleben and Niamh Murtagh provides a state-of-the-art overview of research on changing behaviour to become less environmentally harmful. Exploring how well-designed, contextually appropriate behaviour change interventions can work, it charts a path that challenges traditional assumptions to maximise environmental impact.

Ecological Macroeconomics

Book chapter by Peter Victor in Elgar Encyclopedia of Ecological Economics, tracing the origins of the discipline, emphasising key contributors and defining components; concluding with research questions pointing to possible future directions for the discipline.

Routledge Handbook of Green Finance

This handbook co-edited by Theresia Harrer and Ottmar Lehner offers an authoritative overview of green finance—its characteristics, principles, mechanisms, and the interplay within environmental, social, and governance measurements.

Embedding sustainability in higher education curricula

This viewpoint paper by Simon Mair and Angela Druckman addresses the use of sustainability frameworks in embedding education for sustainability into the curriculum of Higher Education Institutions (HEIs), focusing on the paradox that sustainability frameworks must facilitate transformation of existing structures whilst also being well-enough aligned with current conditions to be readily adopted by today’s HEIs.

Doctor Who and the seeds of anxiety

Journal Paper by Marcus Harmes, Marc Hudson and Richard Douglas, exploring energy justice narratives in popular culture, focusing on five Doctor Who episodes from the 1960s, 70s and 80s.

Managing Climate Risk: The Role of Financial Regulators in the Net Zero Transition

Policy Report by Aldersgate Group and CUSP,  calling on UK Government to provide a strong legal basis for financial regulators to support the transition to a net zero and nature positive economy.

Natural Capital Markets—What farmers and policymakers need to know

Written by CUSP researchers Fergus Lyon and Amy Burnett, this report for the UK Food, Farming and Countryside Commission seeks to understand how new and emerging markets in natural capital fit into a changing landscape for farmers.

Neoliberalism, commercialised mindfulness and the future of psychedelics

This paper by Patrick Elf, Amy Isham and Dario Leoni critically examines the potential effects of commercialising psychedelic substances. Drawing parallels with the well-established commercialisation of mindfulness.

When the dancing went wrong, the evening went right

Journal paper by Mark Ball, making the case for appreciating the ways that cultural practices age and change over time.

Imagining a postgrowth world

Growth is unsustainable. But the world beyond growth is frightening. We have built an economy that is dependent on growth. We must learn anew how society works, when the economy is not growing. And we need to confront the impossibility theorems presented to us by those who resist change. By Tim Jackson.

‘Tipping points’ can be positive too—our report sets out how to engineer a domino effect of rapid change

Blog by Steven R. Smith, Caroline Zimm and Tim Lenton, summarising their work on the Global Tipping Points Report that was just launched at CoP28, outlining strategies for 'positive tipping points' in human domains.

When ads get into our psyche

CUSP researcher Amy Isham examines the ways in which advertising moulds our values towards materialism and the consequences this has for us, our children and the planet.

Raising degrowth to the next level

CUSP researchers Patrick Elf, Simon Mair, and their colleague James Scott Vandeventer reflecting on the imperative for the degrowth movement to embrace the uncomfortable, and engage with business, management, and organisations to advance to the next level.

Imprisoning a Poet

Emma Must was a Library Assistant in the early 1990s when she got involved in a campaign to stop a motorway extension being built through Twyford Down. She was sent to prison for trying to save the hill where she played as a child. Blog by Katy Glassborow.

The invisible heart: postgrowth economy as care

Care is an anathema to capitalism. Its virtues are capitalism’s vices. Its employment-rich foundation for wellbeing is capitalism’s ‘productivity crisis’. Yet, without care we are nothing, our progress is nothing. Without care there is no economy. By Tim Jackson.

Tough Love

Fighting for truth in a polluted world.

Davos to Reykjavík

Decoupling wellbeing from growth.

Echoes of immortality

Art and the Wellbeing Economy. 

Rishi Sunak’s ‘homage to catatonia’

Rishi Sunak has rolled back the UK’s net zero policies and ripped up decades of cross-party consensus on climate change, Tim Jackson writes. “Perhaps consensus is a commodity yet more fragile than consciousness. But its disappearance carries a tragic sense of political and social loss.”

Rethinking Prosperity: business and welfare in a postgrowth economy | Workshop recording

Bringing together practitioners and academics, this workshop set out to co-create an improved understanding of the role of post growth and degrowth for business and society, what it means for organisations, and what the challenges are for welfare provision.

Neoliberalism and its Discontents

C40 Cities podcast with Tim Jackson

Climate Parenting

With Clive Lewis MP, Guy Singh-Watson, Lucy Siegle and many others

BBC Radio 4

Documentary with Christine Corlet Walker

The Water We Swim In

With contributions from CUSP researchers Tim Jackson, Peter Victor and Simon Mair, this gripping narrative podcast series is tackling the big question: What does system change actually mean?

Challenging the myth of eternal economic growth

For Greenpeace's #SystemShift podcast, Tim Jackson joins former Swedish politician Carl Schlyter to discuss the myth of 'eternal economic growth', the need for rethinking measures of progress, and the pressing issues of energy, employment, inequality.


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