
Author(s)
Van Jones
Publisher
HarperOne
Publication Date
2008
Pages
256pp
I heard Van Jones give a talk last year, which was of the most powerful, credible and moving speeches I had ever heard. This is a man who, though firmly rooted in social justice issues in the US, has realised how we cannot separate the poverty agenda from the environmental agenda. He has developed this idea in his first book, ‘The Green Collar Economy’.
The crux of his argument is that if we are going to tackle the climate change/oil dependency problematic, we need to do this at every level of society. It’s not just about developing hi-tech renewable energy solutions or eating organic tofu, but it’s also about engaging working class people by creating jobs that will deliver the low-carbon economy we need. What we lack are blue-collar workers who can install solar panels, insulate and retrofit homes and offices or fix hybrid vehicles.
Furthermore, we can only achieve the required change if we do away with the duality that is dividing society and preventing us from achieving our goals. Ecology and social justice go hand in hand, business and political solutions go hand in hand. It’s time to bring these allegedly separate agendas together, “it’s time for velcro”!
As Jones says most eloquently: “To solve our global problems, we need to engage and unleash the genius of all people, at all levels of society. Some of the minds that can solve our toughest problems are undoubtedly trapped behind prison bars, stuck behind desks in schools without decent books, or isolated in rural communities. A green economy that is designed to pull them in—as skilled laborers, innovators, inventors, and owners—will be more dynamic, more robust, and better able to save the Earth.”
If this concept sounds familiar it is because it has been embraced by politicians on both sides of the Atlantic, and most recently in President Obama’s call for a Green New Deal. If it is the only thing Obama achieves while in office he will have done the planet and its people a huge favour.
Review by
Oliver Dudok van Heel, Founder and Director, Living Values