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This book challenges the prevailing view that regional economic
decline is caused by unionization and can be avoided through tax
cuts. Respected economist Douglas Booth suggests the establishment
of cooperative financial institutions in order to shift corporate
responsibility from stockholders to employees. Policymakers, those
interested in employee ownership, unionists, and those interested
in the nation's economic problems in general will find the book
provocative and timely.
This book sets out the essential features of a new kind of
philosophy, now beginning to take hold among younger generations,
that will have a beneficial impact on the earth's natural and human
environment. Philosophers usually stick to conceptual ideas without
much attention to the messy details of worldly reality, ideas that
are wonderful in themselves, but in need of confrontation with the
actualities of natural and human history. In these pages, concern
is directed especially to the values we hold toward our natural
environment, and in particular toward the global problem of
climatic warming. Philosophy can inform us not just about deciding
how we should live, but about how our values will influence future
prospects for the natural world from which we gain sustenance and
much of our spiritual inspiration.
Economists like to say that there is no such thing as a "free
lunch" whenever we move our social arrangements in a new direction.
According to this kind of thinking, a price will inevitably be paid
for addressing big, society-wide problems such as global warming.
This book takes a contrary view--resolving the problem of global
warming and moving to a more spatially compact form of human
settlement will generate a durable and widespread prosperity and
improvements in the quality of life. In short, fixing global
warming will be a "free lunch." We will all end up being better off
independently of any gains to the climate or the natural
environment. The turn to clean energy will set off an unprecedented
economic boom driven by innovation in energy conservation,
production, and distribution and by a move toward high density
urban living and the private and public construction that will go
with it. Unlike the economic expansions of recent decades, growth
induced by a shift to clean energy and compact living will truly
lift all economic boats. Turning to compact green living and
freeing ourselves from the environmental tyranny of fossil fuels
will set off an investment boom of a new kind--a good boom that
will help cure some of our most intractable social and
environmental ills. This combination of ideas is the unique and
original contribution of this book.
Land trusts are a new and growing phenomenon and are not yet much
studied by academics. This book provides an entry point into the
world of land trusts and biodiversity for anyone (i) doing academic
work in the conservation sciences, (ii) taking their first job with
a land trust and in need of an overview of the topic, or (iii) who
has a general interest in land conservation and the protection of
biological resources. The book sets out an intellectual framework
for thinking about land trusts and biodiversity conservation, one
that blends the critical edge of the academic and pragmatic
concerns of the practitioner. The essential purpose of the book is
to show how land trusts protect biodiversity in the work they do
and how this work is an important step in reforming the institution
of property to account for the welfare of all of nature's living
beings. Anyone wanting a simple overview of the land trust movement
and its work on the conservation of nature's assets need go no
further.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R205
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Discovery Miles 1 680
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