Anthropause
The Beauty of Degrowth
-
- Pre-Order
-
- Expected 13 Jan 2026
-
- $24.99
-
- Pre-Order
-
- $24.99
Publisher Description
A rallying cry to save the Earth with an “anthropause”—a term that can apply to any broad rollback of economic activity that gives nature room to recover and flourish.
“An iconoclast of the best kind, Stan Cox has an all-too-rare commitment to following arguments wherever they lead, however politically dangerous that turns out to be.” —Naomi Klein
In the spring of 2020, people worldwide found themselves confined at home in response to pandemic lockdown orders. Global carbon emissions suddenly plunged 8.8 percent. Air and noise pollution levels plummeted, and streams, rivers, and lakes noticeably became cleaner. Animal life quickly filled spaces that humans had deserted. Scientists documenting how quickly nature flourished in response to less human activity called the phenomena an “anthropause.” For a moment, humanity witnessed the beauty of degrowth.
In a world obsessed with getting and having more—more influence, more money, more fame, more stuff—the idea of degrowth seems counterintuitive. Yet, as environmental catastrophe becomes more widespread and severe, degrowth emerges as a necessary collective intervention to protect the living Earth—and civilization as we know it—from collapse.
In Anthropause, Stan Cox writes that by embracing degrowth, we are not turning our backs on progress. Instead, we are redefining it. We can produce enough goods to satisfy everyone’s needs, Cox argues, while liberating ourselves from ecocidal economies and the injustices they impose. This book lays out a clear vision of what we will gain and how as we embrace this revolutionary transition. We are seeing climate change happening all around us—2024 was the hottest year on record. Storms are stronger, droughts are longer, and wildfires are everywhere. As we approach the tipping point toward irreversible climate catastrophe, it’s clear that we must accept that endless expansion is destructive and reverse it through degrowth. Anthropause shows us how we and the living world will flourish if we succeed.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Cox (The Path to a Livable Future), a former senior scientist at the Land Institute, offers a magisterial summary of modern ills, from obnoxiously loud leaf blowers and light pollution to humanity's growing dependence on large personal vehicles and a food production system that prioritizes profits over affordability and quality. He argues that humans must do away with all facets of their dependence on fossil fuels and that preventing "ecological collapse by deeply altering our values and curbing our material production and consumption" will lead to far happier and healthier lives. He envisions a world in which personal cars no longer exist, air travel is phased out, the work week is no greater than 21 hours, parking lots and roadways are turned into gardens and parks, factory farms vanish, and the military-industrial complex is dismantled. He recognizes that this ideal society, while easy to envision, will be incredibly challenging to achieve. Unfortunately, his solution—to create degrowth movements at the local level—comes across as both naive and unlikely to result in such huge societal changes. While Cox succeeds in quantifying the problems of today, readers will be left without a meaningful course of action.