Ecosocialist Bookshelf — June 2025

June 18, 2025
Issue 
book covers and bookshelf

Climate and Capitalism editor Ian Angus presents five recent books on water, capitalism and nature, anti-environmentalism, the Amazon and Albert Einstein’s socialism.

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By Filippo Menga
Verso Books
Two billion people worldwide are without access to safe water. A leading expert on water politics chronicles the massive impact of climate change, the insatiable water demands of industry and agriculture and the widespread lack of state investment in infrastructure. To escape the deadlock that bedevils access to clean water, we have to reconsider the market and our relationship with nature.


By Alyssa Battistoni
Princeton University Press
Battistoni explores capitalism’s persistent failure to value nature, recovering and reinterpreting the idea of the free gift of nature used by classical economic thinkers to describe what we gratuitously obtain from the natural world, and builds on Karl Marx’s critique of political economy to show how capitalism fundamentally treats nature as free for the taking.


By John Hultgren
MIT Press
Tracing the trajectory of anti-environmentalism from the 19th century frontier to the 1950s suburb, from the shuttered shops of Main Street to the extractive economies of Donald Trump country, Hultgren offers a historically grounded theory of anti-environmentalism, to help identify and combat the forces standing in the way of environmental progress.


By Albert Einstein, John Bellamy Foster
Monthly Review Press
Written during the McCarthyite witch-hunt in the United States, Albert Einstein’s essay was an act of defiance, making a case for socialism unrivalled in its time or ours. Foster’s introduction to this short volume tells the story of Einstein’s lifelong commitment to socialism and shows the importance of his essay, as we enter a time of planetary crisis and new threats of world war.


By Dom Phillips with contributors
Chelsea Green
Journalist Dom Phillips travelled deep into the Amazon rainforest searching for solutions to the problem of deforestation — a threat to the local ecosystem, native tribes and the global climate. When he was murdered by a group of environmental criminals, a team of journalists and activists took up his work to finish his book and share his important message.

[Reprinted from . Inclusion of a book does not imply endorsement.]

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