Requiem for a Species

Requiem for a species : why we resist the truth about climate change
AuthorClive Hamilton
SubjectClimatic changes—Social aspects
Global warming—Social aspects
Twenty-first century—Forecasts
PublisherEarthscan
Publication date
7 April 2010
Pages286 pp.
ISBN978-1-84971-081-7
OCLC489636734
363.738
LC ClassQC903 .H2185 2010

Requiem for a Species: Why We Resist the Truth about Climate Change is a 2010 non-fiction book by Australian academic Clive Hamilton which explores climate change denial and its implications. It argues that climate change will bring about large-scale, harmful consequences for habitability for life on Earth including humans, which it is too late to prevent.[1][2] Hamilton explores why politicians, corporations and the public deny or refuse to act on this reality. He invokes a variety of explanations, including wishful thinking, ideology, consumer culture and active lobbying by the fossil fuel industry.[3] The book builds on the author's fifteen-year prior history of writing about these subjects, with previous books including Growth Fetish and Scorcher: The Dirty Politics of Climate Change.

Requiem for a Species has been reviewed in Resurgence magazine, Socialist Review, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, The Common Review, and Times Higher Education, which named it "Book of the Week". Extracts of the book have appeared in The Guardian and Geographical magazine. The book won a 2010 Queensland Premier's Literary Award.

  1. ^ Munro, Kelsey (27 February 2010). "Too late for all but prayers". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  2. ^ Munro, Kelsey (27 February 2010). "The hope-free zone". The Age.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference sy was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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