Sustainable development's attempted deal between present and future will always collapse under the pressure of 'now' because the needs of the present always win out, he says. Inevitably, this means movable targets and action that will always fall short of what we need. Ultimately, sustainable development is the pursuit of a mirage, the politics of never getting there.
To escape the illusion, he states that society must break through to a new way of understanding sustainability by focusing on the deep needs of the present, not slippery obligations to the future. That means rising to the carbon challenge now, not trying to micro-manage the longer-term, and looking to science for orders of magnitude and direction, not a game-plan.
His book outlines alternative thinking on energy usage, governance, education and the role of enterprise in the cultural aspects of the war on climate change. "This thoughtful and original study throws important critical light on the dominant orthodoxies about sustainable development, and suggests a radically new direction. Foster argues compellingly that present approaches embody floating standards and bad faith, trapping societies into inaction. I suspect this is a seminal piece of work," says Professor Robin Grove-White, former Chair of Greenpeace
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The development of the IT sector especially in the countries such as India and China has gone a long way in changing the face of these countries. The rise of the middle class, the interest that the foreign market is showing in these countries, and the overall development of the economies of these countries can be massively owed to the growth and flourish of the IT sector. http://www.infysolutions.com
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