Feasta’s new book, Fleeing Vesuvius: Overcoming the Risks of Economic and Environnmental Collapse, was launched by Fr Sean McDonagh in European Union House, Dublin on 20th November.
At 440 pages, Fleeing Vesuvius is Feasta’s most ambitious publishing project to date. It draws together many of the ideas Feasta’s members have developed over the years and applies them to a single question – how can we bring the world out of the mess in which it finds itself?
Fleeing Vesuvius confronts this mess squarely, analysing its many aspects: the looming scarcity of essential resources such as fossil fuels – the lifeblood of the world economy; the financial crisis in Ireland and elsewhere; the collapse of the housing bubble; the urgent need for food security; and the enormous challenge of dealing with climate change.
The solutions it puts forward involve changes to our economy and financial system, but they go much further: this substantial, wide-ranging book also looks at the changes needed in how we think, how we use the land and how we relate to others, particularly those where we live.
While it doesn’t discount the complexity of the problems we face, Fleeing Vesuvius is practical and fundamentally optimistic. It will arm readers with the confidence and knowledge they need to develop new, workable alternatives to the old-style expanding economy and its supporting systems. It’s a book that can be read all the way through or used as a resource to dip in and out of.
You can find out more about the book at http://www.feasta.org/documents/vesuvius/index.php.
Fr Sean McDonagh is the central co-ordinator for Justice, Peace and the Integrity of Creation for the Columban missionaries and the chairperson of Greenpeace in Ireland. He became a founding board member of Voice, the successor organisation to Greenpeace when the latter left Ireland.