Transitioning to Geocratia — the People and Planet and Not the Market Paradigm — First StepsParting from the fact that saving Planet Earth, our home, changes everything, we need to build a new ethos where the majority of humankind commits to a system whose only purpose is the pursuit of the welfare of people and Planet Earth. This requires that all Earth resources necessary for the enjoyment of life of all living things be managed to achieve true long-term sustainability. — Álvaro J. de Regil The Unbearable Unawareness of our Ecological Existential CrisisOver the past two years, the full report on Climate Change Mitigation by IPCC scientists, as well as research from other centres such as the Stockholm Resilience Centre, has consistently confirmed that we are on a doomsday trajectory. Unless we move rapidly in the opposite direction, the chances that we will face planetary catastrophes that seriously threaten the existence of life on our planet in the next twenty years are realistic and probable. Unsustainable capitalism keeps us deluded and largely unaware that we are on the brink of a serious existential risk. Therefore the great challenge is to provoke the awareness and critical thinking of ordinary citizens. Only a Citixens Revolution can stop our demise, but capitalism’s behemoth keeps people deceitful and mostly unaware of being on the verge of a catastrophic end. We must arouse Now! –– Álvaro J. de Regil Earth beyond six of nine planetary boundariesThe update of the planetary boundaries framework reveals that six of the nine boundaries have been transgressed, suggesting that the Earth is now outside the safe operating space for humanity. Ocean acidification is about to be exceeded, while aerosol loading exceeds the limit regionally. Stratospheric ozone levels have recovered slightly. The transgression level has increased for all boundaries previously identified as exceeded. Given that primary production drives the biosphere functions of the Earth system, human appropriation of net primary production is proposed as a control variable for the functional integrity of the biosphere. This boundary has also been transgressed. Modeling the Earth system with different levels of transgression of climate change and Earth system boundaries illustrates that these anthropogenic impacts on the Earth system must be considered in a systemic context. —Katherine Richardson et al Controversial Demographic Projections Under Climate Collapse in 2050 - South and Mesoamerica in a Global ContextThe corporate sector is building another aggressive re-engineering of global agrifood systems in South America and Mesoamerica. The region represents a pillar for global food security, warns the UN in the New Mission. Capitalist euphoria assumes 10 billion inhabitants by 2050. This is forging higher agricultural productivity, innovation, digitalisation and the expansion of standardised agriculture. Thus, they produce and market food destined for populations with some or enough consumption capacity, overconsumption and waste of food with equivalent carbon footprints. –– Nubia Barrera Silva The pressing priority of saving the AmazoniaThe world's most biodiverse region is threatened by deforestation levels close to the point of no return. Despite this, the countries involved failed to reach agreements at the last summit in Brazil in August. –– David Roca Basadre Safe and Just Earth System BoundariesHumanity is well into the Anthropocene, the proposed new geological epoch where human pressures have put the Earth system on a trajectory moving rapidly away from the stable Holocene state of the past 12,000 years, which is the only state of the Earth system we have evidence of being able to support the world as we know it. Seven of eight globally quantified safe and just Earth System Boundaries (ESB) and at least two regional safe and just ESBs in over half of global land area are already exceeded. We propose that our assessment provides a quantitative foundation for safeguarding the global commons for all people now and into the future. — Johan Rockström et al ‘The energy transition has not yet begun’Interview with Jean-Baptiste Fressoz (France, 1977), historian of science, technology, and the environment, and professor at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris. He has just published Without Transition: A New History of Energy (Seuil), which will be translated and published in Spanish by Arpa. He is also the co-author, with Christophe Bonneuil, of The Anthropocene Event: The Earth, History, and Us (Points Histoire) and The Joyful Apocalypse: A History of Technological Risk (Seuil). —Hervé Kempf Community-Based Adaptation to Climate Change: Core Issues and Implications for Practical ImplementationsAccording to current forecasts, global heating is likely to exceed 2.8 °C by the end of this century. This makes substantial adaptation measures necessary to secure a broad basis for livelihood provision and the conservation of biodiversity. While the implementation of top-down and technocratic adaptation efforts predominates, related adaptation shortcomings of a socio-economic and ecological nature are becoming more and more apparent. Community-based adaptation (CBA), with its participatory, inclusive and needs-based bottom-up approach, offers a promising and powerful alternative. This article uses a semi-systematic literature review approach to screen the current literature and identify core issues of CBA. ––Tom Selje et al Capitalism and Extreme Poverty: A Global Analysis of Real Wages, Human Height, Mortality Since the Long 16th CenturyThis paper assesses claims that, prior to the 19th century, around 90% of the human population lived in extreme poverty (defined as the inability to access essential goods), and that global human welfare only began to improve with the rise of capitalism. The rise of capitalism caused a dramatic deterioration of human welfare. In all regions studied here, incorporation into the capitalist world-system was associated with a decline in wages to below subsistence, a deterioration in human stature, and an upturn in premature mortality. –– Dylan Sullivan and Jason Hickel Marine plastic pollution as a planetary boundary threat – The drifting piece in the sustainability puzzleThe exponential increase in the use of plastic in modern society and the inadequate management of the resulting waste have led to its accumulation in the marine environment. There is increasing evidence of numerous mechanisms by which marine plastic pollution is causing effects across successive levels of biological organisation. This will unavoidably impact ecological communities and ecosystem functions. –– Patricia Villarrubia-Gómez, Sarah E. Cornell, Joan Fabres Post-growth: the science of wellbeing within planetary boundariesThere are increasing concerns that continued economic growth in high-income countries might not be environmentally sustainable, socially beneficial, or economically achievable. In this Review, we explore the rapidly advancing field of post-growth research, which has evolved in response to these concerns. The central idea of post-growth is to replace the goal of increasing GDP with the goal of improving human wellbeing within planetary boundaries. Key advances discussed in this Review include: the development of ecological macroeconomic models that test policies for managing without growth; understanding and reducing the growth dependencies that tie social welfare to increasing GDP in the current economy; and characterising the policies and provisioning systems that would allow resource use to be reduced while improving human wellbeing. —Giorgos Kallis et al Impact of Climate Change on Biodiversity and Implications for Nature-Based SolutionsThe Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) provides regular scientific assessments on climate change, its implications, and potential future risks based on estimated energy matrixes and policy pathways. The aim of this publication is to assess the risks climate change poses to biodiversity using projected IPCC climate scenarios for the period 2081–2100, combined with key species-sensitivity indicators and variables as a response to climate change projections. —Cor A. Schipper et al Communicating with policy makers about climate change, health, and their intersection: a scoping reviewAmbitious policies are urgently needed to protect human health from the impacts of climate change. Civil society, including researchers and advocates, can help advance such policies by communicating with policy makers. In this scoping review, we examined what is known about effectively communicating with policy makers to encourage them to act on public health, climate change, or their nexus. Based on this literature, we have produced a list of strategic questions that communicators might wish to consider as they prepare to communicate with policy makers. —Joshua Ettinger et al Arghiri Emmanuel and Unequal Exchange: Past, Present, and Future RelevanceTo paraphrase Mao Zedong: Where do ideas come from? Do they drop from the sky? No, they come from social practice, the struggle for production, the class struggle, and scientific work. There is a close link between what goes on in the world, the project of classes and states, and theoretical and political debates. This is Arghiri Emmanuel’s life story, of which his theory of unequal exchange is a prime example. —Torkil Lauesen Value Transfer and Labour Arbitrage Based on Unequal Exchange: The Case of Mexico – United StatesUnequal exchange is a key concept in Marxist critiques of the capitalist global system, proposing that uneven development between the global core and periphery is driven by the core's retention of a substantial portion of value produced in the periphery. This occurs by establishing average global profit rates and international market prices across the global market despite stark wage disparities. This study highlights that wage disparities are crucial for monopoly capital accumulation, resulting in diminished wages and precarious social conditions in Mexico, with a labour value drainage of $135 billion dollars in 2023, representing 7.5% of its GDP. —Mateo Crossa Niell – Álvaro de Regil Castilla How much growth is required to achieve good lives for all?Some narratives in international development hold that ending poverty and achieving good lives for all will require every country to reach the levels of GDP per capita that currently characterise high-income countries. However, this would require increasing total global output and resource use several times over, dramatically exacerbating ecological breakdown. Furthermore, universal convergence along these lines is unlikely within the imperialist structure of the existing world economy. Here we demonstrate that this dilemma can be resolved with an approach rooted in needs-based analyses, increasing the specific forms of production necessary to improve capabilities and meet human needs at a high standard, while ensuring universal access to key goods and services through public provisioning and decommodification. —Jason Hickel / Dylan Sullivan Materialising the Revolution: The Movement Toward EcosocialismThank you for taking the time to do this interview. In my work on social justice, for many years I was primarily concerned with understanding and exposing the global exploitation of workers in the Global South through unequal exchange perpetrated by corporations through labour arbitrage. However, after reading much of what you have written this century, I have concluded that the planetary crisis we are experiencing as a result of dominant monopoly capital poses an imminent existential risk to human and non-human beings and all life at our home unless we urgently organise ourselves to force a radical paradigmatic shift. This new paradigm would replace capitalism with new ecosocialist communities whose only purpose is the pursuit of the well-being of people and the planet through a revolutionary movement. With this vision in mind, I would like to focus on how you envision moving from theory to the actual materialisation of arevolutionary movement that successfully transitionsto the ecosocialist paradigm. —John Bellamy Foster and Álvaro de Regil Castilla he War in Ukraine —A History: How the U.S. Exploited Fractures in the Post-Soviet OrderThe ongoing war between Ukraine and Russia has been driven by internal and external factors. Those factors constitute two blades of a scissors, and explaining the conflict requires taking account of both blades. The external factors center on post-Cold War U.S. geopolitical strategy and the concomitant U.S.-sponsored eastward expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). That expansion can only be understood by reference to the fractures (internal factors) created by the Soviet Union’s disintegration. The external factors reveal the role of the United States, which is implicated to the point of provoking the conflict and obstructing peace. —Thomas I. Palley Imperialism and WhiteSettler Colonialism in Marxist TheoryThe concept of settler colonialism has always been a key element in the Marxist theory of imperialism, whose meaning has evolved gradually over the past century and a half. Within what has become the dominant paradigm of settler colonialism, the approach to the Israeli occupation of Palestine is far removed from historical materialism. Rather than relying on a highly restrictive logic, Marxist analysis seeks to situate the reality of Israeli settler colonialism within a broader and more dynamic historical perspective that captures the complex and changing dialectical relationships between capitalism, class, and imperialism/militarism. —John Bellamy Foster Unequal exchange of labour in the world economyResearchers have argued that wealthy nations rely on a large net appropriation of labour and resources from the rest of the world through unequal exchange in international trade and global commodity chains. Here we assess this empirically by measuring flows of embodied labour in the world economy from 1995–2021, accounting for skill levels, sectors and wages. We find that, in 2021, the economies of the global North net-appropriated 826 billion hours of embodied labour from the global South, across all skill levels and sectors. The wage value of this net-appropriated labour was equivalent to €16.9 trillion in Northern prices, accounting for skill level. This appropriation roughly doubles the labour that is available for Northern consumption but drains the South of productive capacity that could be used instead for local human needs and development. While Southern workers contribute 90% of the labour that powers the world economy, they receive only 21% of global income. —Jason Hickel et al Crisis or collapse? Overshoot and degrowthThe delicate state of the Earth system has been described as a crisis or a set of crises: “ecological crisis,” “climate crisis,” “biodiversity crisis.” Our ecosocial situation has also been described as a crisis. The answer to the dilemma between crisis and collapse could ultimately lie in the combination of the incontrovertible diagnosis of serious ecological overshoot and the urgent need to decelerate—in order to hopefully prevent the consequences of overshoot from forcing a traumatic deceleration. — Asier Arias Demographic Delusions: World Population Growth Is Exceeding Most Projections and Jeopardising Scenarios for Sustainable FuturesThe size of the world population has profound implications for the demand for food, energy, and resources, changes in land use, and greenhouse gas emissions. This study examines why most population projections have underestimated global population growth and the implications for the actions needed to achieve sustainable societies. —Jane N. O'Sullivan Overconfidence in climate overshootGlobal emission reduction efforts remain insufficient to achieve the Paris Agreement temperature goal. This makes the systematic exploration of so-called overshoot pathways, which temporarily exceed the global warming limit set before reducing temperatures to safer levels, a priority for science and policy. Only a rapid reduction in emissions in the short term is effective in reducing climate risks. — Carl-Friedrich Schleussner et al Advancing the Welfare of People and the Planet with a Common Agenda for Reproductive Justice, Population, and the EnvironmentDriven by rising consumption and population, human demands are depleting natural resources essential to human life, damaging farmland, freshwater supplies, fisheries, and forests, and driving climate change. This report offers a strategy to protect natural systems and improve well-being by expanding reproductive justice, a concept that includes family planning, reproductive health, and gender equity, and the preservation of the environment and climate. —J. Joseph Speidel and Jane N. O'Sullivan Just population policies for an overpopulated worldAfter decades of neglect, environmentalists are once again becoming aware of the need to limit the number of human beings. But, like Rip Van Winkle, we find that the world has changed while we were asleep. There are now billions more people, hundreds of millions of new members of the global middle class, and high consumption among the rich. Meanwhile, the planet has become warmer, more polluted, more domesticated, and more impoverished. This article specifies what just population policies look like for an overpopulated world: one where most national populations must decrease significantly to create sustainable societies, and where failure to do so threatens environmental disaster for humans and the rest of life on Earth. — Philip Cafaro Imperialism in the Indo-Pacific — An IntroductionAs respected international relations specialist David C. Kang has argued in American Grand Strategy and East Asian Security in the Twenty-First Century (2017) and other works, there has been a general decline in military spending as a percentage of GDP in the largest East Asian states over the past two decades. Taking the eleven largest states, it has fallen to approximately half of what it was two and a half decades ago, declining from an average of 3.35% in 1990 to an average of 1.8% in 2015, a trend that has continued. This objectively points to a growing, rather than declining, sense of national security in the region. It is this climate of peace that the United States threatens to disrupt, not for the sake of East Asia, but with the aim of preserving its preeminence as a world power at all costs. —John Bellamy Foster and Brett Clark Sustainability transitions in consumption-production systemsThe need for faster and deeper transitions toward more sustainable development pathways is now widely recognized. How to meet that need has been at the center of a growing body of academic research and real-world policy implementation. This paper presents our perspective on some of the most powerful insights that have emerged from this ongoing work. In particular, we highlight insights on how sustainability transitions can be usefully conceptualised, how they come about and evolve, and how they can be shaped and guided through deliberate policy interventions. —Frank W. Geels, Florian Kern and William C. Clark The Perpetual StormThere is a vast and fatal lack of awareness of the reality we are about to face on the coastline that gave birth to modern civilisation. I do not like writing this. Nor do I like, at times, knowing what I know. However, I like it even less, much less, that, knowing what I know, more people are not aware of it, because what is at stake is absolutely incalculable. When so much is at stake, the comfortable silence of those who know can be as eloquently treacherous as the worst of lies. —Juan Bordera “The climate movement has to be part of a broader anti-austerity movement”Beyond carbon footprints, waste management and ‘green’ policies, responsibility for the climate crisis lies with a capitalist minority that leaves little room for action to reverse its course. This is the central thesis of the latest essay by Matthew T. Huber (Chicago, 1970), professor of geography at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. An analyst of the relationship between economics and geography with capitalism, climate policies and social justice, he has just presented The Future of Revolution: Climate Change and the Quest for a Global Democratic Insurrection (Errata Naturae), in which he proposes a reformulation of solidarity, the recovery of public ownership of key sectors (especially energy) and the decommodification of the needs of the working class. —Ester Peñas The Ecological Rift in the Anthropocene—A conversation with John Bellamy Foster on ecology, ecological imperialism, and potential solutions to the ongoing planetary crisis. —John Bellamy Foster, Fabio Querido, Maria Orlanda Pinassi, and Michael Löwy The MAGA Ideology and the Trump RegimeOne week after the January 20, 2025, inauguration of Donald Trump in his second stint as U.S. president, Matthew J. Vaeth, acting director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), issued a memorandum to federal departments and agencies ordering a temporary pause of agency, grant and loan, and financial assistance spending throughout the federal government. This was the opening shot in what the right has called the “Cold Civil War.” In line with all movements in the fascist genus, the current regime will inevitably betray its mass MAGA supporters on the radical right, seeking to relegate them to a more and more subservient and regimented role and negating any policies in fundamental conflict with its capitalist-imperial ends. —John Bellamy Foster Global synthesis and regional insights for mainstreaming urban nature-based solutionsNature-based solutions (NbS) have emerged as a key strategy for sustainably addressing multiple urban challenges, with rapidly increasing knowledge production requiring synthesis to better understand whether and how NbS work in different social, ecological, economic, or governance contexts. Insights in this Perspective are drawn from a thematic review of 61 NbS review articles supported by an expert assessment of NbS knowledge in seven global regions to examine key challenges, fill gaps in Global South assessment, and provide insights for scaling up NbS for impact in cities. —Timon McPhearson et al Einstein’s “Why Socialism?” and ‘Monthly Review’: A Historical IntroductionAlbert Einstein, the world's most famous theoretical physicist and its most celebrated scientist, had fled Germany after the rise of Adolf Hitler, emigrating to the United States in 1933, where he became a citizen in 1940. However, for J. Edgar Hoover's FBI, Einstein remained a dangerous and anti-American figure who threatened the internal security of the United States by his very presence in the country. His 1949 publication of an article entitled ‘Why Socialism?’ for the new magazine Monthly Review: An Independent Socialist Magazine was thus seen by the FBI as direct confirmation of his strong ‘Communist sympathies.’ —John Bellamy Foster The Non-Aligned Movement Then and NowFaced with the nuclear threat and bipolarity of the Cold War, the non-aligned movement has since the 1960s put forward an alternative model based on decolonial solidarity and a fairer global trading system, but ultimately failed to materialise its most far-reaching economic proposals. Today, non-alignment narratives are revived by the BRICS and sometimes by EU ambitions, but a just multipolar world should prioritise environmental cooperation and have the Global South at its centre. An interview with sociologist Paul Stubbs. —Green European Journal | ||
Charting a Communal-Ecological Path: Beyond the Growth Fetish
The concept of generalised autogestion, particularly as developed in the work of Henri Lefebvre, offers an important vantage point from which to critically examine a potential communal-ecological path to socialism inspired in large part by István Mészáros’s work on the communal system. To properly situate the ecological aspect of the communal system, however, it is first necessary to address the issue of growth/degrowth as it is frequently conceived—and indeed misconceived—within various strands of Marxism in the face of the current planetary crisis. Only then can we orient a genuinely communal-ecological path, geared not to growth or degrowth, but to sustainable human development.
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Research and analysis to provoke public awareness and critical thinking
We contribute to the liberalisation of the democratic instituions of society, for they have been captured by the owners of the market. They work in tandem with their market agents, who, posing as public servants, are entrenched in the halls of government. The political class has betrayed its public mandate and instead operates to impose a marketocratic state to maximise the shareholder value of the institutional investors of international financial markets. They own the global corporations and think they own the world on behalf of their very private interest.
Our spheres of action: true democracy – true sustainability – living wage – basic income – inequality – ecological footprint – degrowth – global warming –human development – corporate accountability – civil, political, economic, social, cultural and environmental rights, responsible consumption, sustainable autonomous citizen cells...

Parting from an ethos of true democracy and true sustainability, We, the citizenry, work to advance the paradigm whose only purpose is to go in pursuit of the welfare of People and Planet and NOT the market.
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Land, Cooperation, and Socialism
Brazil’s Landless Workers’ Movement (MST) is Latin America’s largest social movement, having struggled for decades for a people’s agrarian reform and social justice in Brazil. Since its foundation in the early 1980s, the MST has combined land occupations, cooperative work, political education, and internationalism to challenge the country’s highly concentrated latifundia system and resist the expansion of agribusiness. The movement has developed a model of collective struggle rooted in solidarity and mass mobilisation, organising hundreds of thousands of families in rural Brazil. When MST occupies a tract of underutilised or idle land, it first establishes an acampamento (encampment). An acampamento is a direct-action method of pressuring the government to redistribute land in keeping with Brazil’s agrarian reform laws. During this period, the movement organises political education, collective work, and self-governance.
If the struggle succeeds, the acampamento will transition into an assentamento (settlement), now recognised and legalised by the state, and therefore more stable. Like acampamentos, assentamentos are collective projects, even if the families in them maintain individual parcels. In an assentamento, the land cannot be bought or sold. It technically belongs to the state but is managed by the collective or by what could be called the commune. Assentamentos are also self-governed, administer much of their own justice, and self-manage their educational processes. In short, both acampamentos and assentamentos express a high degree of communal control over their production and day-to-day life.
Beyond the struggle for land, the MST works to confront broader capitalist dynamics by embracing agroecology, cooperative production, and political education. All these are elements of what the movement calls a “people’s agrarian reform.” The idea of the “people’s agrarian reform” is that, in a world where financial capital and multinational corporations dominate agriculture, it is not enough to secure land for the landless. One must also develop an alternative model of production and life, embodying socialist and ecological principles.
In this interview, João Pedro Stedile, a key spokesperson and founder of the MST, discusses the movement’s emphasis on collective struggle and solidarity, the challenges of organising cooperative production, and the evolution of the MST’s goals in response to the changing capitalist economy. He also examines the MST’s strategy of building alliances between the rural and urban working class and its engagement with international struggles, particularly with the communal movement in Venezuela. At a time when capitalism is deepening both inequalities and ecological destruction, the MST’s experiences and proposals offer valuable insights into the building of a socialist future
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Subverting green growth propaganda: Degrowth, autonomous struggle, and media
AKC Collective (2023) has recently invited degrowth scholarship to engage with autonomous struggles in less abstract ways, specifically pointing at its tendency to “certify” rather than learn with and from them. Echoing this invitation, we suggest that an (eco)anarchist approach to corporate media may help to understand the creation and resilience of green growth narratives. We demonstrate this in the case of anti-mining struggles around Lützerath, Germany, where we explore the role of integrative propaganda (Ellul, 1965/1973) in managing this socio-ecological conflict. Building on ethnographic research, we identify and illustrate dominant narratives on a corporate-state agreement known as the “RWE-deal,” Lützerath’s symbolism, and left extremism; all of which omit, distort, and distract from the dissent emerging from Lützerath. We then analyze these dominant narratives as (un)intentionally manipulated by exploring news production at Rheinische Post Media Group through Herman and Chomsky’s (1988/2002) Propaganda Model. Building on a discussion around dominant narratives as a form of psychological warfare, we draw out how dominant narratives are intertwined and rely on centring the lifestyle and culture of Lützerath’s inhabitants to secure green growth narratives. We then elaborate on how cherishing the practice of re-inhabiting can help scholars in engagements with autonomous struggle.
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Systemic Strategies for a Complex Transition
This post summarises my talk on 11 July 2025 at the Summer Course of the University of Cadiz, Remedies for a Planet in Crisis. The talk was entitled Strategies for another possible energy model for other possible worlds. It came after those of Antonio Turiel, Alicia Valero, Ferran Puig, Antonio Aretxabala and José Luis Yeltes, who had already clearly defined the problems of energy, material and ecosystemic limits. This presentation aimed to identify solutions, and I used system dynamics tools to do so.
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The Grammar of Resistance: Rethinking Palestine Beyond Pity and Fear
It has become increasingly difficult to speak of Palestine without falling into one of the two dominant registers of Western discourse: on one side, a humanitarianism that evokes compassion but leaves structures of domination untouched; on the other, a strategic realism that calculates but cannot imagine. In both cases, Palestinian resistance is hollowed out—reduced to emotional pathology or excluded from the realm of political rationality. When it is not pitied, it is criminalised. And more and more often, this criminalisation bears the familiar marks of Islamophobia: resistance is framed as terrorism, survival as threat, and thought as potential radicalisation.
Yet, as pro-Gaza demonstrations multiply across Europe—often marked by a belated, conditional, and at times self-exculpatory awakening of conscience—there remains a lesson no intermittent outrage can obscure: Palestinian resistance preceded this moment, persists through it, and will endure beyond it not as a desperate reaction, but as a proposition for the world. It is a resistance that thinks, creates, and envisions futures. It seeks no approval from above but calls upon every political conscience unwilling to surrender to the imperial order.
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Venezuela's Communal Project
Unequal exchange is a key concept in Marxist critiques of the capitalist global system, proposing that uneven development between the global core and periphery is driven by the core's retention of a substantial portion of value produced in the periphery. This occurs by establishing average global profit rates and international market prices across the global market despite stark wage disparities. Today, global trade inequality and value transfers largely stem from multinational corporations relocating production to periphery countries, where similar productivity levels are achieved, butwage disparities only grow. These terms of trade underscore the supremacy of the law of capitalist accumulation over a monopoly driven global economic order. Mexico's export manufacturing sector illustrates this pattern, with productivity levels comparable to those in the United States yet a widening wage gap. This study highlights that wage disparities are crucial for monopoly capital accumulation, resulting in diminished wages and precarious social conditions in Mexico, with a labour value drainage of $135 billion dollars in 2023, representing 7.5% of its GDP.
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Degrowth and flourishing, or stay the same and perish along or stay the way
If we truly desire a dignified and thriving future for generations to come, we have no choice but to degrow by decisively eliminating our consumerist culture
So far this century, in a sector already fully aware of the planetary crisis, ordinary citizens have been called upon with increasing frequency to reduce their consumption urgently. We call for cutting fossil fuel consumption, abandoning them and replacing them with renewable energies, eliminating our consumerist habits, caring for nature, our entire planet, Gaia. However, we have not managed to transcend the citizen's maginary to become aware that either we cut our consumption or we will face an enormous existential risk. This is because capital has systematically prevented this, alienating us from our essence. This not only alienates us in our work and social relationships, from our sense of identity with the community to which we belong and with nature, of which our species is a part, but also prevents us from talking about the impact of the capitalist system on our planet, our home. Indeed, capitalism alienates us from our essence, harassing societies daily with its Promethean discourse that everything can be achieved through technology, that happiness lies in having—not in being—and that we must therefore strive to possess and consume.
The fact is that the vast majority of studies published by the scientific community have consistently sounded the alarm throughout this century, warning that unless we urgently change the unsustainable course we are currently on under capitalism, we will face planetary catastrophes not only from climate change, the most visible of these, but from eight other essential planetary processes that provide the conditions necessary for life to flourish and be sustained. If we fail to do so, as early as 2040, we will face multiple catastrophes that will cause perhaps millions, if not billions, of human deaths in the decades that follow. Likewise, we are well on the way to bringing about the sixth mass extinction of species and the probable extinction of life on the planet, as known to those who survive. This constitutes the collapse of civilisation and an enormous existential risk. A collapse which, ironically, is being brought about directly by the very civilisation that is so often touted—preeminently Western civilisation—because of its capitalist, warmongering, colonialist, and racist nature, the emblem of which is undoubtedly the United States.
This essay is based on the geocratic paradigm I have been developing since 2020, which proposes reorganising ourselves to take care of our planet. To take care of us, it is necessary to put the planet's needs before our own. The latest version of Geocratia can be found here.
This essay focuses on demonstrating that it is perfectly possible to reverse the dystopian trajectory we are on, and that this is done by applying market logic through the exercise of our power of consumption. First, it is argued that it is clearly possible to greatly reduce our planet's response to the crisis the capitalocene has brought it into, after having enjoyed the equilibrium it maintained throughout the Holocene. This is achieved by changing our way of life, through a cultural shift, by decreasing our consumption of resources to styles that allow us to fully enjoy life while taking care of the planet, staying within the planetary boundaries necessary for its stability, and living much better by consuming less of everything. In Geocratia, degrowth is a consequence of cultural change and not a model or an end in itself. The end is to save ourselves by saving our planet by replacing capitalism. Second, there is a clear way to convince the majority needed to materialise such a change, by replacing the dystopian trajectory we are unconsciously following through the subterfuge of the culture of consumerism. This happens by following market logic, adopting a new culture of sustainable consumption aimed at satisfying our real and universal needs, and discarding everything the market instils in us about what we must consume, even if it is absolutely unnecessary and harmful to people and the planet. Indeed, market logic is the only one that significantly influences government decision-making, because by adopting the new geocratic consumer culture, the blow to the system is direct, forcing governments to change the bulk of their economic, social and environmental policies for the benefit of people and planet and to the detriment of capital. Moreover, regardless of the pace at which governments replace their policies, people and the planet will benefit from the fall in consumption. Finally, applying market logic, it also opens the door to organising ourselves in rural and urban geocratic communities under different forms of social organisation (nation, province, municipality, city, community, village...), beyond the increasingly obsolete concept of the nation-state
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Geocratia, the Paradigm that Pursues the Well-being of People and the Planet, Not the Market
Organising to save ourselves by saving the planet is the most important thing we will ever undertake in our lives; it is our last chance to have a future
From the moment I became aware of the planetary crisis, back in 2010, I began reflecting and imagining how we humans could live in harmony with nature. I was alarmed that, given the path we are currently on, it seems impossible for our species to remain within the planetary boundaries necessary for the reproduction and sustainability of life and health on our home, planet Earth. After much research and interaction with a community increasingly concerned about the planetary crisis, in 2020, I published a proposal to imagine and suggest how to abandon the current paradigm. It is about moving towards a vision that guarantees a dignified, pleasant and sustainable life for future generations by caring for Gaia, our planet's biosphere, to maintain the conditions necessary for the flourishing and conservation of all forms of life. Geocratia is a practical concept whose dialectic directly contrasts with the current market-driven paradigm; therefore, it must be concluded that it is anti-capitalist by nature. Five years later, after observing how those in absolute control of the reins of power insist on maintaining the same trajectory that ensures a high existential risk to humans and non-humans, I am reviewing and deepening the geocratic proposal. This is reinforced by commentary from colleagues and by new research published by a variety of authors, confirming that humanity's current trajectory is leading us straight to our final cliff. The first part situates us in the context in which we find ourselves, from a political, ecological, economic, and consumer perspective. The second part presents the proposal to transition to Geocratia in its symbiosis with the Gaia hypothesis, its structure and the practical way to implement it. It concludes by suggesting how to take the first step at the community level, raising awareness and forming citizen cells, the most basic and organic form of transitioning to Geocratia.
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«Geocratia proposes to establish a social contract with our planet»
A conversation with his ideologue
On the occasion of the publication of his latest essay (2026), Geocratia, the paradigm that goes for the welfare of people and the planet and not the market, we wanted to talk to the Mexican author to explore his original political proposal.
Introductory biography
Álvaro de Regil Castilla is the executive director of the Jus Semper Global Alliance. This organisation has been promoting living wages as the basis of any sustainable and democratic society since 2003. He launched the Living Wages North andSouth (TLWNSI) initiative, an international benchmark in denouncing unequal exchange through labour arbitration in global supply chains generated by corporate globalisation. He is also a founding member of the International Living Wage Observatory (OISAD) at La Salle University in Mexico City.
Since 2015, his work has centred on promoting the need to build the imaginary of a new paradigm for the well-being of people and planet in a truly democratic environment, free from capitalism. As part of this transformative concept, he works in the fields of labour rights, business and human rights, degrowth/steady-state economics, basic income, and the drastic reduction of humanity's environmental footprint as the only way to achieve the sustainability of life on our home planet, Earth.
Alvaro is also a contributor to the vision and transformative praxis of the Great Transition Initiative at the Tellus Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, and a consultant on the underlying causes of immigration with several community organisations in California and with California Lutheran University.
Starting concepts
Laura G. Vales: Five years have passed since you wrote the first version of Geocratia, a proposal that now has a much more forged structure. How would you summarise this paradigm for a citizenry that already perceives that the current system is in crisis, but does not know where to look?
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