This book draws on recent developments across a range of perspectives
including psychoanalysis, narrative studies, social practice theory,
posthumanism and trans-species psychology, to establish a radical
psychosocial alternative to mainstream understanding of 'environmental
problems'. Only by addressing the psychological and social structures
maintaining unsustainable societies might we glimpse the possibility of
genuinely sustainable future. The challenges posed by the reality of
human-caused 'environmental problems' are unprecedented. Understanding
how we respond to knowledge of these problems is vital if we are to have
a hope of meeting this challenge. Psychology and the social sciences
have been drafted in to further this understanding, and inform
interventions encouraging sustainable behaviour. However, to date, much
of psychology has appeared happy to tinker with individual behaviour
change, or encourage minor modifications in the social environment aimed
at 'nudging' individual behaviour. As the ecological crisis deepens, it
is increasingly recognised that mainstream understandings and
interventions are inadequate to the collective threat posed by climate
change and related ecological crises.