Index

Greenpeace

Greenpeace is a global environmental organisation, consisting of Greenpeace International (Stichting Greenpeace Council) in Amsterdam, and 28 natio

Organisation
Project
12 October 2015

Ethical consulting for the Global Age

Keynote Address
12 December 2014

Professor Camilleri launched the book on 12 December 2014 at RMIT  University.  

He described it as an elegantly written, clearly presented and insightfully convceived book. Though intended primarily as a text for students, the book would be of much wider interest, for it offered an unusualy holistic view of the future, arguing for a prudential aporach to uncertainty and risk.

Speech
9 July 2015

A public forum at which Professor Joseph Camilleri and Dr Mick Pope spoke on the encyclical Laudato Si' issued by Pope Francis in May 2015.

Article

Joseph A. Camilleri, 'Ecological Politics: The birth of a new movement', World Review, 17(1), April 1978, 45-59.

Article

Joseph A. Camilleri, 'Nuclear Controversy in Australia: The uranium campaign', The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 35(4), April 1979, 40-44.

  • topic

With the world on track this century for 3-4 degrees of global warming, accelerating species extinctions, polar melting, the devastation of marine ecosystems and the loss of the Amazon as a tropical ecosystem, planet Earth faces an unprecedented ecological crisis; one that constitutes a profound threat to international security and a seemingly insurmountable political challenge.

This forum follows the publication of the Manifesto of “Planet Politics” in 2016, which argued that a state-centric mentality and world order was failing to both see and respond to this crisis. Our diverse group of experts consider just what it will take to reorient the field and global institutions to support efforts to prevent dangerous levels of climate change and reverse global ecological degradation. We asked them to consider what political, cultural and system change would look like – whether in particular sites or struggles, or in the system as a whole - and how best might it be pursued. What practices of ecological solidarity and resistance can be most effective? How can we imagine and create a different kind of world order, one that truly appreciates the ecologically entangled world which it claims to govern?

Article

'Ecology and Peace: Responding to the Ethos of Exclusion', A Forum for Theology in the World, Special Issue edited by Anne Elvey, Deobrah Guess and Keith Dyer, 3(2), 2016, pp. 9-28.

Pages