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The chapter aims to offer a critical appraisal of contemporary eco-socialism in the West. As a radicalhomocentric (not ecocentric) application of socialist analysis and prescriptions to environmentalism, a major development for eco-socialism in recent years is that it is more willing to acknowledges the complexity of the modern globalising world and thus to move away from that crude economism which has disillusioned many would-be Marxist theorists and practitioners in the past. A further development in eco-socialism has been growing interest in manifestations of thepractical side of eco-socialist theory and envisioning, constructing alternatives to capitalism which are dominated by social and environmental considerations and by the principle ofproduction for social need rather than profit through consumerism. These alternative forms are diverse and together form acommunity economy of alternative spaces within capitalism, although thetransgressive potential of such ‘transitional forms’ could perhaps be limited making see notes above them become a force for the status quo.
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Department of Geography, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK
David Pepper
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Correspondence toDavid Pepper.
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Institute of Marxism, Peking University, Beijing, 100871, China, People's Republic
Qingzhi Huan
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Pepper, D. (2010). On Contemporary Eco-socialism. In: Huan, Q. (eds) Eco-socialism as Politics. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-3745-9_3
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