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Poverty and Climate Change - Restoring a Global Biogeochemical Equilibrium (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,881
Discovery Miles 38 810
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Poverty and Climate Change - Restoring a Global Biogeochemical Equilibrium (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Studies in Sustainable Development
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R3,891
Discovery Miles: 38 910
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Most, if not all of the global biogeochemical cycles on the earth
have been broken or are at dangerous tipping points. These broken
cycles have expressed themselves in various forms as soil
degradation and depletion, ocean acidification, global warming and
climate change. The best proposal for an organic solution to fixing
the myriad broken cycles is a deliberate investment in solutions
that first acknowledge the historic roles played by both the
subjugated peoples, and the economic beneficiaries of the
environmental exploitations of the past. Ever since Europeans made
contact with the West, a series of global circumstances including
the genocide of the indigenous people of the Americas, the
enslavement and global subjugation of Africans, and the emergence
of Western concepts of trade dominance and capitalism, have led to
deleterious impacts on the global biogeochemical cycles. Addressing
the broken biogeochemical cycles should be done with a clear
understanding that it was not only human subjects which were
subjugated, but also land, water, and air. These three global
stores must be replenished from the ideological position that
poverty is not simply the absence of money, but is also the lack of
access to non-polluting energy sources, to clean air devoid of
runaway greenhouse gasses, and to local conditions devoid of
climate change instabilities. With this in mind, the global
powerbrokers can enter into a new deal with developing nations,
shifting the paradigm toward a new ecological approach that rewards
good behavior and sets new standards of worldwide relations based
on ecologic inclusivity rather than the exclusive economic
arrangements currently in order. Harnessing a forward thinking
approach to analyzing the current global environmental crisis, this
book will be of great interest to students and scholars of
sustainable development, political ecology, sustainable
agriculture, climate change and environmental justice.
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