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El. knyga: Dam the Rivers, Damn the People: Development and resistence in Amazonian Brazil

  • Formatas: 148 pages
  • Serija: Sustainable Development Set
  • Išleidimo metai: 05-Nov-2013
  • Leidėjas: Earthscan Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134044337
  • Formatas: 148 pages
  • Serija: Sustainable Development Set
  • Išleidimo metai: 05-Nov-2013
  • Leidėjas: Earthscan Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134044337

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The Brazilian Amazon is the largest area of tropical rainforest in Latin America. Brazil is that continent's most rapidly developing country. The Amazon is at the heart of the conflict between conservation and development, between people and power, and between heritage and modernisation. In the name of development, the powerful are colonizing the forest. The greatest new threat comes from the massive hydro-electric schemes which are being pushed ahead with little regard to efficacy, the rights of the people, or the survival of the forest. Dam the Rivers, Damn the People is about two of the most affected areas, Balbina in Amazonas and the Xingu River in Para. Barbara Cummings describes the plans which the state attempted to keep secret, the extent to which these projects will destroy the forest, the consequent dispossession of the people of the forest and, above all, their growing resistance. She shows how the outcome of their fight affects us all.

Originally published in 1990
Preface vi
Acronyms and Abbreviations xiii
Introduction 1(5)
1 Amazonian Development: An Overview
6(10)
Boom---bust cycles of Amazonia
6(3)
Government control and "mega-projects"
9(7)
2 Dams in the Rainforest: What Do We Know?
16(18)
Definition of tropical rainforests
17(3)
Tropical soils and dams
20(2)
Forest flooding and water cycles
22(3)
Species losses to reservoirs
25(4)
Dams and disease proliferation
29(1)
Hydro-development and indigenous peoples
30(4)
3 The 2010 Plan
34(10)
4 Balbina: A Case Study
44(19)
History
44(13)
Resistance
57(6)
5 Altamira---Xingu: Birth of the Resistance
63(26)
The Kararao hydroelectric project
66(6)
Resistance
72(1)
Environmentalists/ecologists
73(3)
Social justice/minority political parties
76(3)
Native peoples/human rights activists
79(10)
6 Under the Politics of Development
89(13)
7 Prospects for the Future
102(11)
Alternatives
102(5)
Strengthening the resistance
107(6)
Epilogue 113(2)
Appendix 115(3)
References 118(8)
Index 126
Authored by Cummings, Barbara J.