1st Edition

Working Through Planetary Breakdown Labour, Skill and the Changing Climate

Edited By Chantel Carr, Jesse Adams Stein Copyright 2026
232 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

232 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

232 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book offers a genuinely interdisciplinary engagement with the future of paid and unpaid work in the context of the twin challenges of decarbonisation and the growing impacts of an unstable climate. It is innovative in its grounding of such discussions in the everyday realities of workers’ experiences with an empirical focus on skill, occupational shifts and technological change at the... Read more

A Note on this Book’s Origins

List of Contributors

Acknowledgements

Cover Photograph: Artist’s Statement

Skill, Industrial Transformation and Work in a Climate-Changing World
Chantel Carr and Jesse Adams Stein

PART I:   Skills and Training

1. “What’s your Apocalypse Skill?”: Revaluing Flexible Skills for the Apocalyptic Good-Life

Kezia Barker and Rosie Cox

2. Localising the Operation of Grid-Tied Microgrids for Future Resilience

Kathryn Lucas-Healey and Hedda Ransan-Cooper

3. Navigating Skills in Uncertain Energy Futures: Education, Skills and Training for the Australian Air-Conditioning Workforce
Elyse Stanes, Chantel Carr, Pauline McGuirk, Matthew Daly and Daniel Daly

4. Quiet Sustainability: Tacit Knowledge and Emic Capacities in Building and Construction
Ben Lyall and Sarah Pink

5. “Creative Technicians” and “Technical Creatives”: Transferable Skills for Challenging Times
Jesse Adams Stein

PART II: Industrial Transformation

6. A Transition with Teeth: Reconfiguring the Concept of Just Transition to Recognise the Imperative of Fossil Fuel Cessation
Frances Flanagan

7. Place-Sensitive Approaches to Coal Transitions in Australia
Chantel Carr and Natasha Larkin

8. Industrial Democracy and Climate Struggle: The Limits and Possibilities of Using Health and Safety Committees to Promote Industrial Democracy and Address Climate Change
Eugene Schofield-Georgeson, Michael Rawling and Brett Heino

9. Hot Under the PPE Collar: Occupational High Heat During the Covid-19 Pandemic
Elizabeth Humphrys

10. Industrial Control and Capitalist Inefficiency: Manufacturing Workforce Development in the Polycrisis
Mark Dean and Daniel Nicholson

11. From Occupational Steering to Occupational Citizenship? Understanding Career Pathways after the Demise of Australian Automotive Manufacturing
Tom Barnes

Index

Biography

Chantel Carr is an Australian Research Council DECRA Fellow in Geography and Sustainability at the University of Wollongong, Australia. Chantel is a human geographer working on the social and labour dimensions of energy transitions and decarbonisation.

Jesse Adams Stein is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Design at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Australia. Jesse is an interdisciplinary design researcher whose work focuses on labour, technology and industries in transition.

'Climate change is reorganising work from the scale of “the economy” to “the body” and everything in between. Yet what these intersecting changes mean in practice for workers and communities requires diving into the minutiae of the array of occupations, places and visions already beginning to re-characterise the work landscape. In Working through Planetary Breakdown, Carr and Stein assemble 11 beautifully written chapters into a compelling collection that illuminates the informal as well as formal reskilling, rethinking and reimagining involved in work-based climate action. It is exactly the sort of peek under the hood that is needed to accelerate the just transition and climate change adaptation.'

Professor Lauren Rickards, Director, La Trobe Climate Change Adaptation Lab