Get involved in YOUR city and locality - Improve Your World
Get involved in YOUR city and locality - Improve Your World
Get involved in YOUR city and locality 
Improve Your World Home | About Us | Sitemap | Search | Contact Us 



Also see : Government Publications, NGO Products, Online Videos


Please help us in making this a comprehensive resource section for those directly connected or affected by this issue e.g. citizens, NGOs, government officers, students, teachers, researchers. Please directly upload or email us relevant content. This can include lists, articles, photographs, research papers, links to websites, etc. Please volunteer as an expert panelist to whom we can direct queries from our website visitors.

 

Home >> Social Books, Mags, Movies and CDs >> By Individuals



Findstone.com - Marlet Place for Building Stones

How Much Should a Person Consume? : Thinking Through the Environment
Ramachandra Guha.
New Delhi,
Permanent Black, 2006,
xiv, 262 p.,
$33. ISBN 81-7824-158-7.

    Contents: Preface. 1. History sans Chauvinism. 2. The Indian road to sustainability. 3. Three environmental Utopias. 4. Democracy in the forest. 5. Authoritarianism in the wild. 6. The historical social ecology of Lewis Mumford. 7. The subaltern social ecology of Chandi Prasad Bhatt. 8. The democratic social ecology of Madhav Gadgil. 9. How much should a person consume?. Index.
    "This book presents a provocative comparative history of environmentalism in two large, ecologically and culturally diverse democracies, India and United States.
    The book takes as its point of departure the dominant environmental philosophies in the two countries, here identified as 'agrarianism' in India and 'wilderness thinking' in the USA. It then proposes an integrative, inclusive theoretical framework that goes beyond these partisan and partial ideologies. Named 'social ecology', this framework is here applied in the analysis of environmental thought, and in understanding the trajectory of controversies over large dams, state forests, and wildlife reserves.
    Profiles of three exemplary social ecologists-Lewis Mumford, Chandi Prasad Bhatt, and Madhav Gadgil--follow. The concluding chapter poses what Guha regards as the fundamental environmental question --how much should a person or country consume?--and explores various answers to it.
    Based on research done over two decades, and written with the author's characteristic verve and flair, this book ranges widely over a vast intellectual terrain. It brims with ideas and information on environmental histories, environmental philosophies, environmental scholars, and environmental activists. Guha offers trenchant critiques of privileged and isolationist proponents of conservation, persuasively arguing the case for biospheres that care as much for humans as for the other species with which they share the earth.
    How Much Should a Person Consume? is a deeply felt summation of one pioneering and globally influential scholar's views on environmentalism. Like everything else by Ramachandra Guha, this book wears its immense learning lightly. It will be 'necessary reading' within the academy even while attracting a large general readership outside it."

Available at:
This book is available from:
Vedams eBooks (P) Ltd.
Vardhaman Charve Plaza IV,
Building # 9, K.P Block, Pitampura,
New Delhi 110 034, India
Fax: 91-11-27310613
e-mail: vedams@vedamsbooks.com


Also see : Government Publications, NGO Products, Online Videos