This groundbreaking open access volume introduces eco-social contracts as a bold and actionable vision for addressing the major, interconnected crises of our time climate change, biodiversity loss, rising inequality, and the erosion of public trust and democratic legitimacy.
At its heart lies a fundamental realization that can no longer be ignored: the social contract has been broken for billions of people. As a result, the bonds between people, planet, and power must be rewoven.
Increasingly recognized by the UN, global assessments such as the IPBES Transformative Change Assessment, and by a growing international community of civil society leaders, youth movements, and NGOs, eco-social contracts call for renewed solidarity, systemic equity across generations and communities, inclusive governance, and a fundamental transformation of economic systems.
They challenge dominant economic paradigms and present a holistic and compelling alternative one that rebalances our relationships with nature, institutions, and one another. This book captures that momentum, blending visionary thinking and grounded inspiration with hard-won lessons on unlocking and mobilising collective agency.
Rooted in diverse knowledge systems from Indigenous cosmologies and feminist and care-based economics to regenerative development and post-growth thought it brings together contributions from leading scholars, practitioners, artists, and activists across the globe. Bridging theory and practice, it offers vital insights into how regenerative, inclusive, and just futures can be co-created.
For changemakers, students, and all those seeking hope, direction, and clarity in a time of global uncertainty, this book is both a call to action and a guide for transformation inviting readers to imagine and co-create sustainable and just futures our hearts and minds know are possible.
Selected Endorsements
Inger Andersen Executive Director, UNEP: This volume is a progressive and constructive contribution to building societies in harmony with nature.
Mary Robinson The Elders, and Former President of Ireland and UN High Commissioner: This book makes clear that a new eco-social contract must be built on structural justice, intergenerational equity, and inclusive governance.
At its heart lies a fundamental realization that can no longer be ignored: the social contract has been broken for billions of people. As a result, the bonds between people, planet, and power must be rewoven.
Increasingly recognized by the UN, global assessments such as the IPBES Transformative Change Assessment, and by a growing international community of civil society leaders, youth movements, and NGOs, eco-social contracts call for renewed solidarity, systemic equity across generations and communities, inclusive governance, and a fundamental transformation of economic systems.
They challenge dominant economic paradigms and present a holistic and compelling alternative one that rebalances our relationships with nature, institutions, and one another. This book captures that momentum, blending visionary thinking and grounded inspiration with hard-won lessons on unlocking and mobilising collective agency.
Rooted in diverse knowledge systems from Indigenous cosmologies and feminist and care-based economics to regenerative development and post-growth thought it brings together contributions from leading scholars, practitioners, artists, and activists across the globe. Bridging theory and practice, it offers vital insights into how regenerative, inclusive, and just futures can be co-created.
For changemakers, students, and all those seeking hope, direction, and clarity in a time of global uncertainty, this book is both a call to action and a guide for transformation inviting readers to imagine and co-create sustainable and just futures our hearts and minds know are possible.
Selected Endorsements
Inger Andersen Executive Director, UNEP: This volume is a progressive and constructive contribution to building societies in harmony with nature.
Mary Robinson The Elders, and Former President of Ireland and UN High Commissioner: This book makes clear that a new eco-social contract must be built on structural justice, intergenerational equity, and inclusive governance.







