Hi 'gepeders':

Routledge/Earthscan have just published my book "Sustainable Capitalism and the 
Pursuit of Well-Being" that offers a novel path to sustainable development in 
which self-interest can be good for the planet. 

Book description: 

"Sustainable development is the central challenge of the 21st Century yet it is 
poorly understood. It is commonly thought of as conservation of the natural 
systems that human society depends on. We are told that capitalism is the 
problem because it feeds our self-interest and that governments must regulate 
our behavior to prevent us consuming nature. This book shows that there is a 
more enjoyable path to sustainable development.  

What is missing in most discussions of sustainable development is the task of 
improving human lives. It is commonly presumed that this means increasing 
national income. Yet research has shown that in the rich countries the 
relationship between income and happiness is weak, that consumption does not 
make us happy, and that occasional bouts of happiness do not add up to an 
enjoyable life. The rich are only marginally happier than the middle-classes 
because we all have been trained by modern capitalism to seek happiness through 
excessive consumption on a happiness treadmill. Only constant fixes of more and 
more 'stuff' can make us happy and then only temporarily; we always need more. 
And the perpetual pursuit of - and constant failure to find - happiness through 
working and spending is consuming the planet. So we are told we must be forced 
to consume better or less to sustain development. 

Because human systems are complex and unpredictable, governments cannot do 
this. They cannot solve much simpler social problems and prevent recessions and 
depressions, eradicate hunger or poverty, guarantee employment or affordable 
health care, or ensure peace and security. Using theories of complex adaptive 
systems developed from the natural sciences, this book explains why sustainable 
development - increasing human enjoyment while conserving the environment - 
cannot be created by governments from the top-down. Sustainability is not just 
another policy problem; it is a matter of changing the social paradigm from the 
bottom up.   

For this everyone needs to learn the most valuable lesson of capitalism: to 
seek their personal self-interest, what is good for them. But this is not the 
self-interest that you indulge in the mall with shopping therapy. Positive 
psychology has shown that a truly enjoyable life comes from the pursuit of 
well-being that is a complete engagement with life by developing as far as 
possible our personal talents and abilities. Our psychological needs for 
autonomy, competence, and relatedness are laid waste by 'getting and spending' 
in a competitive society. And an enjoyable life needs less consumption.  

Two questions remain. First, how might it be possible to teach people how to 
find true enjoyment in the pursuit of well-being? This book shows how this 
might emerge with a social marketing campaign that uses progressive commitments 
within small social groups to enforce positive deviances from normal patterns 
of consumption. We can begin to learn how to manage our lives for enjoyment 
rather than accumulation by gaining financial management skills, avoiding most 
debts, and knowing the difference between needs - that we must have - and the 
unnecessary wants that marketers try to make us indulge. 

 If these lessons were well learned and people consumed much less as they 
enjoyed their lives in the pursuit of well-being, what would become of modern 
capitalism that thrives on constant economic growth driven by consumerism? 
Would it collapse into a permanent depression of falling demand and deflation? 
Because society is a complex system, no prediction is reliable and non-linear 
changes may always intrude. However, this book argues that if business and 
government react intelligently to the public's changing demands, capitalism may 
be sustained but in a modified form. Capitalism could continue and sustain 
development if most of us pursued our personal well-being."     More 
information and chapter excerpts are available at: 
http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415662819/.

You can also order the hardback or e-book at Amazon: 
http://www.amazon.com/Sustainable-Capitalism-Well-Being-Routledge-Development/dp/0415662818/ref=sr_1_6?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1389909175&sr=1-6&keywords=neil+e+harrison
If you need any further information please contact me at this email address or 
Virginia Dale at [email protected].

Cheers, 

Neil

Neil E. Harrison, Ph.D. 
Executive Director
The Sustainable Development Institute (www.sd-institute.org). 
P.O. Box 423 Laramie, WY 82073 

Author, Sustainable Capitalism and the Pursuit of Well-Being (Routledge 2014) 
more information at www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415662819
Co-Editor, Climate Innovation: Liberal Capitalism and Climate Change (Palgrave 
Macmillan 2014) more information at 
http://us.macmillan.com/climateinnovation/NeilEHarrison. 
Author, Constructing Sustainable Development (Suny Press)
Co-Editor, Science and Politics in the International Environment (Rowman and 
Littlefield) 
Editor, Complexity in World Politics (Suny Press)
Editor, Selected Topics in National and Regional Institutions and 
Infrastructures (UNESCO)  


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