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Serge Latouche

    January 12, 1940

    Serge Latouche is a French economics professor renowned for his critique of economic orthodoxy and consumer society. He is a prominent proponent of the "degrowth" theory, challenging notions of sustainable development and economic efficiency. Latouche scrutinizes economism and utilitarianism in social sciences, offering an alternative perspective on North-South relations. His work calls for a fundamental reevaluation of our current economic and social paradigms.

    Serge Latouche
    Breve trattato sulla decrescita serena e Come sopravvivere allo sviluppo
    Die Verwestlichung der Welt
    Die Unvernunft der ökonomischen Vernunft
    La scommessa della decrescita
    Es reicht!
    Farewell to Growth
    • 2010

      Most of us who live in the North and the West consume far too much – too much meat, too much fat, too much sugar, too much salt. We are more likely to put on too much weight than to go hungry. We live in a society that is heading for a crash. We are aware of what is happening and yet we refuse to take it fully into account. Above all we refuse to address the issue that lies at the heart of our problems – namely, the fact that our societies are based on an economy whose only goal is growth for growth’s sake. Serge Latouche argues that we need to rethink from the very foundations the idea that our societies should be based on growth. He offers a radical alternative – a society of ‘de-growth’. De-growth is not the same thing as negative growth. We should be talking about ‘a-growth’, in the sense in which we speak of ‘a-theism’. And we do indeed have to abandon a faith or religion – that of the economy, progress and development—and reject the irrational and quasi-idolatrous cult of growth for growth’s sake. While many realize that that the never-ending pursuit of growth is incompatible with a finite planet, we have yet to come to terms with the implications of this – the need to produce less and consume less. But if we do not change course, we are heading for an ecological and human disaster. There is still time to imagine, quite calmly, a system based upon a different logic, and to plan for a ‘de-growth society’.

      Farewell to Growth