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Inequality in a Context of Climate Crisis after COVID uses a complex realist approach to examine the crisis of three interconnected problems: economic inequality, climate change, and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Widely acknowledged as the key driver of political discontent and social instability, economic inequality across high and middle-income countries is profoundly interconnected with climate change. Both of these issues are now set within the particularly acute context of COVID-19 and its aftermath. Confronting the crisis of these inherently interwoven issues is now the major problem for all political and governance systems. This book uses a complex realist frame of reference to understand the character of social-cultural-economic-political-ecological systems. It gives us a vocabulary and modes of thinking to confront these societal challenges and inform future action.

Contributing to our thinking about dynamic social systems, this text deploys complex realism to understand our trajectory towards increasing inequality. It puts complexity to work in addressing fundamental social issues in a context of climate crisis after COVID-19. This book will be of interest to students and scholars across the social sciences, in particular to those studying social inequality, climate change, heterodox economics, complex systems, and Master's students in prgrammes with an applied focus. It will be of use to policymakers and practitioners.

List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
Series editors' preface xi
Preface xvii
Acknowledgements xix
List of abbreviations
xx
1 Inequality: an issue whose time has come
1(23)
2 Conceptualizing inequality
24(21)
3 Describing inequality
45(19)
4 Income, wealth, and inequality
64(17)
5 Inequality and capitalism(s) in the twenty-first century
81(22)
6 The role of the state in relation to inequality in a context of climate crisis -- how this works out for incomes and wealth
103(27)
7 The role of the state in relation to inequality in a context of climate crisis - the `social wage' and spatial planning
130(18)
8 The formal politics of inequality: what kind of governance systems do we need to confront inequality in a context of climate change and after COVID?
148(18)
9 The new politics of equality
166(15)
10 The futures that are possible for us
181(16)
Index 197
David Byrne is Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Applied Social Science at the University of Durham. He has written widely on methodology and inequality deploying the complexity frame of reference to inform all his work over the past twenty-five years. His recent books include Complexity Theory and the Social Sciences an Introduction (1996), Interpreting Quantitative Data (2002), Social Exclusion (2005), Applying Social Science (2011), Complexity Theory and the Social Sciences: The State of the Art (with Gill Callaghan 2014), Paying for the Welfare State in the 21st Century (with Sally Ruane 2017), and Class after Industry (2019).