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Running Dry
Essays on Energy, Water, and Environmental Crisis
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2015
About this book
The world’s water is under siege. A combination of corporate greed, the elite pursuit of political power, and our unrelenting reliance on carbon-based energy is accerlating a broad range of environmental and political crises. Potentially catastrophic climate change, driven primarily by the consumption of oil and gas, threatens the environment in a variety of ways, including producing unprecedented patterns of heavy weather and superstorms in some places and droughts in others. Alongside intensifying environmental dangers posed by our reliance on carbon energy, the conditions of modern life, from happiness to the possibility of democratic politics, are also being undermined.
In Running Dry, historian Toby Craig Jones explores how modern society’s unquenchable thirst for carbon-based energy is endangering the environment broadly, as well as the historical roots of this threat. This accessible book examines the history of the "energy-water nexus," the ways in which oil and gas extraction poison and dry up water resources, the role of corporate "science" in deflecting attention away from the emerging crises, and the ways in which the rush to capture more energy is also challenging America's democratic order.
Author / Editor information
TOBY CRAIG JONES is an associate professor of history and the director of the Global and Comparative History master’s degree program at Rutgers University. He is also the author of Desert Kingdom: How Oil and Water Forged Modern Saudi Arabia.
Reviews
"Toby Craig Jones's Running Dry: Essays on Energy, Water, and Environmental Crisis is a very small book about a very big topic ... And with little room to waste words, he doesn't mince them either - cutting through the fog of current 'terrorism' discussion to declare that 'America's wars in the Middle East have been directly linked to the terms and ways of thinking about energy,' fixed in place since the 1973 oil embargo."—Los Angeles Review of Books
Read the full review here (http://goo.gl/bsSSTG)
— Los Angeles Review of BooksRead the full review here (http://goo.gl/bsSSTG)
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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1. Race and Place in Cadillac- Corning
1 -
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2. A Neighborhood Is Born: Housing Development, Racial Change, and Boundary Building
15 -
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3. Maintaining Racial Boundaries: Criminalization, Neighborhood Context, and the Origins of Gang Injunctions
33 -
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4. The Chaos of Upstanding Citizens: Disorderly Community Partners and Broken Windows Policing
56 -
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5. “We Don’t Need No Gang Injunction! We Just Out Here Tryin’ to Function!”
78 -
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6. Conclusion
112 -
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References
123 -
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Index
133
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
August 6, 2015
eBook ISBN:
9780813569949
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
112
Other:
6 photographs
This book is in the series
eBook ISBN:
9780813569949
Keywords for this book
pinpoints; environment; ecology; environmentalism; conservation; preservation; nature; natural resources; political science; public policy; environmental policy; science; global warming; climate change; carbon-based energy; oil; gas; natural gas; carbon energy; renewable energy; renewable resources; energy-water nexus; Arabia; politics; political power; rutgers; rutgers university; scholarship; essays; rutgers university press; nonfiction; collection; essay collection; non-fiction; non fiction; weather; superstorms; modern life; global climate change; ecological crisis; environmental issues; environmental crisis
Audience(s) for this book
College/higher education;