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The proposed book focuses on one of the most important issues
affecting humankind in this century - Peak Oil or the declining
availability of abundant, cheap energy-and its effects on our
industrialized economy and wildlife conservation. Energy will be
one of the defining issues of the 21st Century directly affecting
wildlife conservation wherever energy extraction is a primary
economic activity and indirectly through deepening economic
recessions. Since cheap, abundant energy has been at the core of
our industrial society, and has resulted in the technological
advancements we enjoy today, the peak in world oil extraction would
potentially have major impacts on civilization unless we prepare
well in advance. One potential economic solution covered in the
book would be a Steady State Economy with a stable population and
per capita consumption, particularly in such industrialized
countries as the United States. Furthermore, the lack of cheap,
abundant energy directly and indirectly affects conservation
efforts by professional societies and federal and state agencies,
and NGOs concerned with wildlife issues. We need to recognize these
potential problems and prepare, as much as possible, for the
consequences stemming from them.
The proposed book focuses on one of the most important issues
affecting humankind in this century - Peak Oil or the declining
availability of abundant, cheap energy-and its effects on our
industrialized economy and wildlife conservation. Energy will be
one of the defining issues of the 21st Century directly affecting
wildlife conservation wherever energy extraction is a primary
economic activity and indirectly through deepening economic
recessions. Since cheap, abundant energy has been at the core of
our industrial society, and has resulted in the technological
advancements we enjoy today, the peak in world oil extraction would
potentially have major impacts on civilization unless we prepare
well in advance. One potential economic solution covered in the
book would be a Steady State Economy with a stable population and
per capita consumption, particularly in such industrialized
countries as the United States. Furthermore, the lack of cheap,
abundant energy directly and indirectly affects conservation
efforts by professional societies and federal and state agencies,
and NGOs concerned with wildlife issues. We need to recognize these
potential problems and prepare, as much as possible, for the
consequences stemming from them.
Americans have been conditioned to appreciate, cheer, and serve
economic growth. Brian Czech argues that, while economic growth was
a good thing for much of American history, somewhere along the way
it turned bad, depleting resources, polluting the environment, and
threatening posterity. Yet growth remains a top priority of the
public and polity. In this revolutionary manifesto, Czech knocks
economic growth off the pedestal of American ideology. Seeking
nothing less than a fundamental change in public opinion, Czech
makes a bold plea for castigating society's biggest spenders and
sets the stage for the 'steady state revolution'. Czech offers a
sophisticated yet accessible critique of the principles of economic
growth theory and the fallacious extension of these principles into
the 'pop economics' of Julian Simon and others. He points with hope
to the new discipline of ecological economics, which prescribes the
steady state economy as a sustainable alternative to economic
growth. Czech explores the psychological underpinnings of our
consumer culture by synthesizing theories of Charles Darwin,
Thorstein Veblen, and Abraham Maslow. Speaking to ordinary American
citizens, he urges us to recognize conspicuous consumers for who
they are - bad citizens who are liquidating our grandkids' future.
Combining insights from economics, psychology, and ecology with a
large dose of common sense, Czech drafts a blueprint for a more
satisfying and sustainable society. His ideas reach deeply into our
everyday lives as he asks us to re-examine our perspectives on
everything from our shopping habits to romance. From his
perspective as a wildlife ecologist, Czech draws revealing
parallels between the economy of nature and the human economy. His
style is lively, easy to read, humorous, and bound to be
controversial. Czech will provoke all of us to ask when we will
stop the runaway train of economic growth. His book answers the
question, 'How do we do it?'.
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