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El. knyga: Abundant Earth: Toward an Ecological Civilization

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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Feb-2019
  • Leidėjas: University of Chicago Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780226596945
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Feb-2019
  • Leidėjas: University of Chicago Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780226596945

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In Abundant Earth, Eileen Crist not only documents the rising tide of biodiversity loss, but also lays out the drivers of this wholesale destruction and how we can push past them. Looking beyond the familiar litany of causes—a large and growing human population, rising livestock numbers, expanding economies and international trade, and spreading infrastructures and incursions upon wildlands—she asks the key question: if we know human expansionism is to blame for this ecological crisis, why are we not taking the needed steps to halt our expansionism?

Crist argues that to do so would require a two-pronged approach. Scaling down calls upon us to lower the global human population while working within a human-rights framework, to deindustrialize food production, and to localize economies and contract global trade. Pulling back calls upon us to free, restore, reconnect, and rewild vast terrestrial and marine ecosystems. However, the pervasive worldview of human supremacy—the conviction that humans are superior to all other life-forms and entitled to use these life-forms and their habitats—normalizes and promotes humanity’s ongoing expansion, undermining our ability to enact these linked strategies and preempt the mounting suffering and dislocation of both humans and nonhumans.

Abundant Earth urges us to confront the reality that humanity will not advance by entrenching its domination over the biosphere. On the contrary, we will stagnate in the identity of nature-colonizer and decline into conflict as we vie for natural resources. Instead, we must chart another course, choosing to live in fellowship within the vibrant ecologies of our wild and domestic cohorts, and enfolding human inhabitation within the rich expanse of a biodiverse, living planet.
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1(10)
PART ONE The Destruction of Life and the Human Supremacy Complex
1 Unraveling Earth's Biodiversity
11(33)
2 Human Supremacy and the Roots of the Ecological Crisis
44(22)
3 The Framework of Resources and Techno-Managerialism
66(17)
PART TWO Discursive Knots
4 Is the Human Impact Natural?
83(30)
5 The Trouble with Debunking Wilderness
113(24)
6 Freedom, Entitlement, and the Fate of the Nonhuman World
137(30)
PART THREE Scaling Down and Pulling Back
7 Dystopia at the Doorstep
167(18)
8 Welcoming Limitations
185(29)
9 Restoring Abundant Earth
214(29)
Epilogue: Toward an Ecological Civilization 243(6)
Notes 249(26)
References 275(26)
Index 301
Eileen Crist is associate professor in the Department of Science, Technology, and Society at Virginia Tech. She is the author of Images of Animals: Anthropomorphism and Animal Mind and coeditor of a number of books, including Gaia in Turmoil: Climate Change, Biodepletion, andEarth Ethics in an Age of Crisis; Life on the Brink: Environmentalists Confront Overpopulation; Keeping the Wild: Against the Domestication of Earth; and Protecting the Wild: Parks and Wilderness, the Foundation for Conservation.