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9780520248052

How Much Should a Person Consume?

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780520248052

  • ISBN10:

    0520248058

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2006-11-15
  • Publisher: Univ of California Pr

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Summary

Based on research conducted over two decades, this accessible and deeply felt book provides a provocative comparative history of environmentalism in two large ecologically and culturally diverse democracies--India and the United States. Ramachandra Guha takes as his point of departure the dominant environmental philosophies in these two countries--identified as "agrarianism" in India and "wilderness thinking" in the U.S. Proposing an inclusive "social ecology" framework that goes beyond these partisan ideologies, Guha arrives at a richer understanding of controversies over large dams, state forests, wildlife reserves, and more. He offers trenchant critiques of privileged and isolationist proponents of conservation, persuasively arguing for biospheres that care as much for humans as for other species. He also provides profiles of three remarkable environmental thinkers and activists--Lewis Mumford, Chandi Prasad Bhatt, and Madhav Gadgil. Finally, the author asks the fundamental environmental question--how much should a person or country consume?--and explores a range of answers. Copub: Permanent Black

Author Biography

Ramachandra Guha has taught at Stanford and Yale universities. He has been Sundaraja Visiting Professor at the Indian Institute of Science, and Indo-American Community Chair Visiting Professor at the University of California at Berkeley

Table of Contents

Preface xi
1 History sans Chauvinism 1(34)
2 The Indian Road to Sustainability 35(36)
3 Three Environmental Utopias 71(19)
4 Democracy in the Forest 90(35)
5 Authoritarianism in the Wild 125(27)
6 The Historical Social Ecology of Lewis Mumford 152(23)
7 The Subaltern Social Ecology of Chandi Prasad Bhatt 175(15)
8 The Democratic Social Ecology of Madhav Gadgil 190(30)
9 How Much Should a Person Consume? 220(31)
Index 251

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