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The Real Environmental Crisis
Why Poverty, Not Affluence, Is the Environment's Number One Enemy
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2003
About this book
Drawing a completely new road map toward a sustainable future, Jack M. Hollander contends that our most critical environmental problem is global poverty. His balanced, authoritative, and lucid book challenges widely held beliefs that economic development and affluence pose a major threat to the world's environment and resources. Pointing to the great strides that have been made toward improving and protecting the environment in the affluent democracies, Hollander makes the case that the essential prerequisite for sustainability is a global transition from poverty to affluence, coupled with a transition to freedom and democracy.
The Real Environmental Crisis takes a close look at the major environment and resource issues—population growth; climate change; agriculture and food supply; our fisheries, forests, and fossil fuels; water and air quality; and solar and nuclear power. In each case, Hollander finds compelling evidence that economic development and technological advances can relieve such problems as food shortages, deforestation, air pollution, and land degradation, and provide clean water, adequate energy supplies, and improved public health. The book also tackles issues such as global warming, genetically modified foods, automobile and transportation technologies, and the highly significant Endangered Species Act, which Hollander asserts never would have been legislated in a poor country whose citizens struggle just to survive.
Hollander asks us to look beyond the media's doomsday rhetoric about the state of the environment, for much of it is simply not true, and to commit much more of our resources where they will do the most good—to lifting the world's population out of poverty.
The Real Environmental Crisis takes a close look at the major environment and resource issues—population growth; climate change; agriculture and food supply; our fisheries, forests, and fossil fuels; water and air quality; and solar and nuclear power. In each case, Hollander finds compelling evidence that economic development and technological advances can relieve such problems as food shortages, deforestation, air pollution, and land degradation, and provide clean water, adequate energy supplies, and improved public health. The book also tackles issues such as global warming, genetically modified foods, automobile and transportation technologies, and the highly significant Endangered Species Act, which Hollander asserts never would have been legislated in a poor country whose citizens struggle just to survive.
Hollander asks us to look beyond the media's doomsday rhetoric about the state of the environment, for much of it is simply not true, and to commit much more of our resources where they will do the most good—to lifting the world's population out of poverty.
Author / Editor information
Hollander Jack :
Jack M. Hollander is Professor Emeritus of Energy and Resources at the University of California, Berkeley. He is author and editor of more than one hundred research publications and twenty books, including The Energy-Environment Connection (1992).
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
vii -
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ILLUSTRATIONS
ix -
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PREFACE
xi -
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INTRODUCTION: A CRISIS OF PESSIMISM
1 -
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1. A WORLD APART
19 -
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2. SIX BILLION AND COUNTING
28 -
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3. CAN THE EARTH FEED EVERYONE?
38 -
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4. FISH TALES
55 -
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5. IS THE EARTH WARMING?
66 -
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6. WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE
90 -
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7. THE AIR WE BREATHE
106 -
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8. FOSSIL FUELS— CULPRIT OR GENIE?
124 -
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9. SOLAR POWER TO THE PEOPLE
142 -
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10. NUKES TO THE RESCUE?
156 -
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11. WHEELS
165 -
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12. DON’T HARM THE PATIENT
179 -
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13. CHOICES
192 -
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NOTES
203 -
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INDEX
229 -
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
237
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
April 2, 2003
eBook ISBN:
9780520938403
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
251
eBook ISBN:
9780520938403
Keywords for this book
environmental threats; sustainability; economic development; global resources; endangered species act; environmentalism; freedom; population growth; poor nations; global shortages; climate change; agriculture; culture of affluence; food supply; poverty; fisheries; forests; fossil fuels; water pollution; air quality; solar power; nuclear power; technological advances; deforestation; global warming; public health; gmos; democracy; environmental crisis; global poverty