
"Earth for All" presents five revolutionary steps to save humanity from climate catastrophe. A Foreword INDIES finalist praised as "mandatory reading in schools," this survival guide combines cutting-edge modeling with spiritual depth to transform our inequitable economic system into a sustainable future.
Sandrine Dixson-Declève, co-author of Earth for All: A Survival Guide for Humanity, is a globally recognized climate strategist and sustainable development leader. As Co-President of the Club of Rome from 2018 to 2024 and a TED Countdown speaker, she brings decades of expertise in systems thinking, policy advocacy, and economic transformation. The book, a cornerstone of contemporary sustainability literature, merges ecological urgency with actionable solutions for climate resilience, equitable economies, and planetary boundaries.
Dixson-Declève’s career spans advisory roles for the European Commission, BMW, and the Climate Governance Commission, alongside faculty positions at Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership. Her earlier works include influential policy frameworks like the Planetary Emergency Plan and A System Change Compass. Recognized among GreenBiz’s "30 Most Influential Women Driving Green Business," she co-led the Earth4All initiative, which underpins the book’s vision.
The Club of Rome, founded in 1968, pioneered global sustainability discourse through landmark reports like The Limits to Growth. Earth for All builds on this legacy, offering a roadmap adopted by policymakers and institutions worldwide. Translated into multiple languages, it serves as a critical reference for international climate action and systems-change strategies.
Earth for All presents a data-driven roadmap to address climate collapse, inequality, and ecological breakdown through five systemic transformations ("The Five Turnarounds"). Using global modeling, it contrasts two scenarios: societal collapse under business-as-usual ("Too-Little-Too-Late") vs. a sustainable future achieved by 2050 via energy transitions, economic equity, food system reforms, and global cooperation.
This book is essential for policymakers, sustainability professionals, and activists seeking actionable climate solutions. It also appeals to general readers interested in systemic reforms for equity and ecological resilience, with clear language and visuals making complex concepts accessible.
Yes—it combines rigorous analysis with optimism, offering concrete policy solutions rather than doom-mongering. Readers praise its balance of scientific depth and readability, with GoodReviews calling it "required reading for anyone concerned about our planet’s future".
The framework includes:
It advocates rapid decarbonization via renewable energy adoption, fossil fuel phaseouts, and carbon pricing, paired with job retraining programs. Case studies from successful national transitions show feasibility without sacrificing economic growth.
This optimistic pathway achieves sustainability by 2050 through bold policies: universal basic services, progressive taxation, and $1 trillion/year investments in green infrastructure. Modeling shows it could lift 3-4 billion people out of poverty while staying within planetary boundaries.
The book argues GDP-focused capitalism drives inequality and ecological harm. It proposes "wellbeing economies" prioritizing healthcare, education, and environmental health metrics over endless growth.
While advocating renewable tech like solar and wind, the authors emphasize technology must serve equity—e.g., decentralized energy grids for rural access—rather than enriching few corporations.
Yes. It calls for halving meat consumption in wealthy nations, ending fossil-fuel-based fertilizers, and transitioning to agroecology to slash emissions while improving food security.
Some argue its scenarios underestimate political resistance to wealth redistribution. Others note the modeling assumes unprecedented global cooperation, which critics call overly optimistic.
As a spiritual successor, it updates the 1972 classic with modern systems modeling. While Limits warned of collapse, Earth for All focuses on executable solutions, reflecting 50 years of climate science advancements.
A Nobel Peace Prize-nominated economist and former Co-President of the Club of Rome, Dixson-Declève combines 30+ years of climate policy experience with collaborations across 40+ nations, informing the book’s pragmatic yet visionary tone.
The authors stress that national actions (e.g., EU Green Deal) must align with international frameworks. Case studies show regional successes in renewable transitions and poverty reduction can scale with coordinated policy.
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We're living in borrowed time. The gap between what we know we must do and what we're actually doing has never been wider. Half a century after "Limits to Growth" warned us about planetary boundaries, we've blown past several of them. Yet here's the paradox: we've also never been better equipped to solve these problems. Renewable energy is now cheaper than fossil fuels. We understand inequality's corrosive effects on democracy. We know how to end poverty. The tools exist-what's missing is the collective will to use them before the window closes. Picture two children born in 2020-one in Lagos, another in Los Angeles. Their futures diverge dramatically depending on choices made this decade. In the "Too Little Too Late" scenario, incremental changes fail to address root causes. By 2030, schools close from air pollution in China while California burns. Bangladesh diverts education funds to flood defenses. Lagos swells to 20 million with limited opportunity. By 2050, we've crashed through the 2C threshold, ice sheets collapse, and the Amazon dries out. Migration surges as equatorial regions become uninhabitable. Trade wars erupt over dwindling resources. Social trust evaporates as governments prove incapable of long-term thinking amid cascading crises. But there's another path. The "Giant Leap" scenario shows what happens when nations unite early in the 2020s to transform financial institutions, tackle inequality head-on, and invest in green transitions. By 2050, both children grow up in cleaner environments with genuine opportunities. The American child's family receives $20,000 annually from a Citizens Fund built on wealth and resource fees. Greenhouse emissions plummet. Social tension declines as wellbeing improves and trust rebuilds. Which future materializes depends entirely on implementing five extraordinary turnarounds-not someday, but now.