Lexington Books
Pages: 176
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-2023-1 • Hardback • August 2007 • $121.00 • (£93.00)
Pamela Stricker is assistant professor of political science at California State University, San Marcos.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Sustainable Development
Chapter 3 Politics, Economics, and the Shift to Sustainable Agriculture
Chapter 4 From Red to Green: Scientists, Politics, and Agriculture
Chapter 5 Pursuing Energy and Medical Self-Sufficiency
Chapter 6 Pearl of the Sea
Chapter 7 Codifying Environmental Protection
Chapter 8 Opening Pandora's Box
Chapter 9 Greening the Curriculum
Chapter 10 People, Nature, and Development from the Cuban Point of View
Chapter 11 Lessons
Stricker's treatise on the 'greening' of Cuba is a must read for anyone interested in ecologically sustainable development, both organic and urban agriculture, 'green medicine,' environmental education, social and environmental justice, the challenges faced by contemporary Cuban society and the lessons to be learned from the implementation of sustainable development policies and alternative technologies on a national scale. Her book reveals how Cuba not only survived the economic and social effects of the collapse of the socialist bloc in the early 1990s but has prospered in recent years through the successful implementation of environmentally sustainable and organic forms of agriculture, innovative approaches to local food production, energy conservation, reliance on alternative sources of energy, the use of 'green' and other alternative forms of medicine, environmental education programs and a comprehensive legal framework for the protection of the environment and the monitoring of the ecological effects of foreign investment and tourism.
— Richard Harris, California State University
Stricker's book is an excellent starting point for discussion, as well as an in-depth case study that makes an important contribution to a growing literature on sustainable development and enviornmental ethics.
— Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics, October 2008
In this useful study, Pamela Stricker delves into a little known aspect of the Cuban Revolution and looks at environmental policy as it impacts on evolving sustainable development.
— Ronald H. Chilcote, University of California, Riverside