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The Sage Handbook of Eco-Social Politics and Policy
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The Sage Handbook of Eco-Social Politics and Policy

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February 2026 | 672 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd

The Sage Handbook of Eco-Social Policy and Politics offers a bold and timely rethinking of how public policies and political action can address ecological challenges while simultaneously advancing a broad range of social goals—such as equity, wellbeing, inclusion, and democratic participation—through an integrated and transformative approach.

Moving beyond the traditional silos of environmental protection and social welfare, this handbook presents a comprehensive framework for understanding how ecological and social justice are deeply interconnected—and must be tackled together.

At the heart of eco-social thinking is the recognition that sustainability cannot be achieved without justice, nor justice without sustainability. From the uneven impacts of climate change to the structural inequalities embedded in environmental harm, this volume explores how power, politics, and policy shape our responses to ecological crises. It brings together leading scholars and practitioners from around the world to examine the theoretical foundations, political struggles, policy innovations, and transformative movements that define the eco-social landscape.

Structured into five thematic sections, the handbook begins with key theories, informing concepts and histories, then moves through political dynamics, policy design, grassroots activism, and future visions for eco-social transformation. It offers critical insights into how welfare systems, governance structures, and social movements can be reimagined to support both people and the planet.

The Sage Handbook of Eco-Social Policy and Politics is an essential resource for anyone seeking to understand and shape a just and sustainable future.

Section One: Theories, Concepts, and Histories
Section Two: Politics of Eco-Social Crises
Section Three: Eco-Social Policy
Section Four: Eco-Social Movements, Resistance, and Activism
Section Five: Eco-Social Futures and Transformations

 

Karen Bell, Emma Foster, and Silpa Satheesh
Introduction
 
Section 1: Theory, Concepts, Context
Dimitris Stevis
Chapter 1: Just Transition as a Contested Ecosocial Strategy
Matteo Mandelli, Anne-Laure Beaussier, Tom Chevalier, and Bruno Palier
Chapter 2: Socio-Ecological Risks: A Definition, Taxonomy and Operationalisation
John Berten, Robin Schulze Waltrup, and Alexandra Kaasch
Chapter 3: Global Eco-Social Policy: The Integration of the Ecological, the Economic and the Social in International Organisations’ Policy Proposals
Justine Gangneux
Chapter 4: Contested Places: Navigating the Politics of the X-Minute City
Katja Hujo and Gabriele Köhler
Chapter 5: Eco-Social Policies in the Global South and North: Potential and Challenges for Creating New Eco-Social Contracts
Harriet Thomson, Carolyn Snell, Ana Stojilovska, Karla Ricalde, Stella Volturo, Nessa Winston, Milena Büchs, Diana Valero, Robin Schulze Waltrup, Anna Seaton O’Connor, Nora Ratzmann, Angus Lee, Evandro Coggo Cristofoletti, and Rebecca Ince
Chapter 6: Bringing the Climate Emergency into the Mainstream of Social Policy: A Cross-Cutting Review of Major Gaps, Opportunities, and Needed Action
Mladen Domazet
Chapter 7: Doughnut Economics, Degrowth and Eco-Social Transition
Katharina Bohnenberger, Maddalena Lamura, and Julia Cremer
Chapter 8: Eco-Social Welfare Integration in Germany
 
Section 2: Politics of Eco-Social Crisis
Miriam Pemberton
Chapter 9: Demilitarizing to Decarbonize
Rehnuma Ferdous and Tata Zafar
Chapter 10: Wetland Management in Bangladesh
Julie Gilson and Alejandra Dueñas
Chapter 11: The Eco-Social Politics of Waste in Southeast Asia
Akhila Kumaran and S. Mohammed Irshad
Chapter 12: Unlike Father, the Son? Displacement and Intergenerational Mobility Along the Coasts in Kerala
Gutu Olana Wayessa
Chapter 13: Land Tenure Policy and Eco-Social Justice in Ethiopia: Revisiting ‘Land to the Tiller’ Motto Fifty Years On
Juliana Sampaio Pedroso de Holanda, and Pietari Kääpä
Chapter 14: From Environmental Protection to Greenwashing: Framing Sustainable Development in Brazilian Media
 
Section 3: Eco-Social Policy
Darryn Snell and Al Rainnie
Chapter 15: Renewable Energy and Regional Development: Implications for Eco-Social Policy
Annette Hastings
Chapter 16: Eco-Social Justice and the ‘Everyday’ Neighbourhood Environment
Sina Shahab
Chapter 17: Tiny Houses: A Housing Solution or a Planning Problem?
Elisabetta Mocca
Chapter 18: The Dark Side of Urban Liveability: Questioning the Liveable City as a Planning Ideal-Type
Sun-Jin Yun and Seunghyeok Ahn
Chapter 19: Why Renewable Energy Expansion Hasn't Been Fast Enough in South Korea: A Political Economy Perspective
Stefan Schoppengerd
Chapter 20: Failing Better: The Unlikely Eco-Social Welfare State in Germany
Dennis Tamesberger, Simon Theurl, and Daniel Witzani-Haim
Chapter 21: Green Job Guarantees: A Small Puzzle Piece of Environmental Policy or a First Step For A System Change?
David Palomera and Peter Starke
Chapter 22: The Growth Dependence of the Welfare State
 
Section 4: Eco-Social Movements, Activism, Resistance
Mónica Salazar Vides and José Pablo Prado Córdova
Chapter 23: Identity-Rooted Communality as the Underlying Driver for Forest Conservation in Three Territories in Guatemala
Thomas Bobo
Chapter 24: Territory and Nature in Zapatista Discourse: Social Movements, Conflict and the Environment
Emma Foster and Peter Kerr
Chapter 25: The Queer Eco-Social Movement and the Radical Potential of Queer Ecology
Lorah Steichen, Patrick Bigger, and Khem Rogaly
Chapter 26: Climate Reparations and the Peace Transition
Bhumika Muchhala
Chapter 27: Situating Sovereign Debt within the Climate-Debt Cycle: The Colonial Origins, Financial Hierarchy, and Epistemic Roots of Sovereign Debt in the Global South
Ioana Pantilimon
Chapter 28: The Eco-Social and Intercultural Pact of the South and Green Transitions in Eastern Europe
Karen Bell
Chapter 29: ‘Eat the Rich!’: The Ecological Case for the Redistribution of Income and Wealth
Patrick Bond
Chapter 30: From Eco-Social Policy to Eco-Socialism in an Era of Ideological Flux
 
Section 5: Eco-Social Transformation/Futures
Richard Bärnthaler
Chapter 31: Reimagining Environmental as Eco-Social Politics and Policy: Towards Eco-Social Alliances ‘From Below’
Fiona Dukelow and Mary P. Murphy
Chapter 32: The Transformative Potential of Eco-Social Welfare, Navigating between Pragmatic and Utopian Possibilities in the Welfare Work-Care Nexus
Kati Närhi, Heather Boetto, and Satu Ranta-Tyrkkö
Chapter 33: Promoting the Ecosocial Transition of Societies: Advancing Political and Structural Action in Social Work
Bing Xue, Bin Han, Hongqing Li, Jianshi Wang, and Karen Bell
Chapter 34: Ecological Civilization in China: Striving for Unity, Harmony and Reciprocity with Nature
Jorge Alfredo Carballo Concepción, Helen Yaffe, Janet Rojas Martínez, and Karen Bell
Chapter 35: Cuba’s Life Work: ‘Tarea Vida’ and Three Decades of Eco-Social Policy
Karen Bell and Thomas Muhr
Chapter 36: Vivir Bien: Effective, Equitable and Decolonial Eco-Social Policy in Bolivia
Étienne von Bertrab
Chapter 37: Mexican Humanism and the Transformation of the Yucatán Peninsula

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ISBN: 9781529684247
£135.00