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Good Green Jobs in a Global Economy Making and Keeping New Industries in the United States

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ISBN-10: 0262018225

ISBN-13: 9780262018227

Edition: 2012

Authors: David J. Hess

List price: $30.00
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Description:

Good Green Jobs in a Global Economy is the first book to explore the broad implications of the convergence of industrial and environnmental policy in the United States. Under the banner of "green jobs," clean energy industries and labor, environmental, and antipoverty organizations have forged "blue-green" alliances and achieved some policy victories, most notably at the state and local levels. In this book, David Hess explores the politics of green energy and green jobs, linking the prospect of a green transition to tectonic shifts in the global economy. He argues that the relative decline in U.S. economic power sets the stage for an ideological shift, away from neoliberalism and toward…    
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Book details

List price: $30.00
Copyright year: 2012
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 9/21/2012
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 312
Size: 6.25" wide x 9.00" long x 1.25" tall
Weight: 1.188
Language: English

David J. Hess is Professor of Sociology, Associate Director of the Institute for Energy andEnvironment, and Director of the Program on Environmental and Sustainability Studies at VanderbiltUniversity. He is the author of Alternative Pathways in Science and Industry: Activism,Innovation, and the Environment in an Era of Globalization (MIT Press, 2007) andLocalist Movements in a Global Economy: Sustainability, Justice, and Urban Development inthe United States (MIT Press, 2009), and many other books.

Preface
Introduction
Background
Energy, Manufacturing, and the Changing Global Economy
Green Jobs and the Green Energy Transition
Policies and Politics
Green Industrial Policy and the 111th Congress
State Governments and the Greening of Import Substitution
The Greening of Regional Industrial Clusters
Localist Alternatives to the Mainstream Transition
Processes and Explanations
Green Transition Coalitions and Geographical Unevenness
After 2010: Continued Unevenness in the Green Transition
Conclusion
Appendix: State Government Votes for Green Energy Laws
Notes
References
Index
Series List