<p>An engaging work . . . In its essence, this book is a call to resist. To resist the structural violence that O’Brien identifies climate change to be.</p>
Environmental Values
<p>O’Brien is at his strongest when he attends to the idiosyncrasies of his witnesses and their distinctive contributions to thinking about climate change. He is thoughtful and constrained, presenting clear connections and lessons for the reader.</p>
Christian Century
<p>A creative, timely, and helpful contribution to the canon of Christian environmentalist literature. . . . The book is an excellent resource for scholars and particularly for climate activists facing the discouragement common in their work. </p>
Reading Religion
<p>A powerful addition to the developing study of evironmental and social justice. </p>
Choice
<p> O’Brien points to the practical examples of activism and nonviolent peacemaking</p>
Yale Climate Connection
Introduction: Toward a Witness of Resistance
Part 1: Climate Change and Nonviolence
1. The Wicked Problem of Climate Change
2. Nonviolent Resistance
Part II: Five Witnesses of Nonviolent Resistance
3. John Woolman's Moral Purity and Its Limits
4. Jane Addams and the Scales of Democracy
5. Dorothy Day and the Faith to Love
6. Martin Luther King Jr.'s Hope for an Uncertain World
7. Cesar Chavez and the Liberating Power of Sacrifice
Conclusion: What Can We Do?
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Cesar Chavez, Martin Luther King Jr., Dorothy Day, Jane Addams, and John Woolman are five of the most important people our planet has produced, and it’s remarkably good to see their witness brought to bear on the greatest problem our planet has ever faced.