AltaMira Press
Pages: 294
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7591-1025-0 • Hardback • December 2008 • $151.00 • (£117.00)
978-0-7591-1026-7 • Paperback • December 2008 • $65.00 • (£50.00)
978-1-4616-4772-0 • eBook • December 2008 • $61.50 • (£47.00)
Gary M. Kroll is associate professor in the History Department of SUNY at Plattsburgh. Richard H. Robbins is University Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Department of Anthropology of SUNY at Plattsburgh.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Globalization and the Environment: A Primer
Chapter 2 Chapter 1: The Ecological Footprint
Chapter 3 "Ecological Footprints of Nations, 2005 Update"
Part 4 Part 1: Environments
Chapter 5 Chapter 2: Energy
Chapter 6 "The Anthropology of Oil: The Impact of the Oil Industry on a Fishing Community in the Niger Delta"
Chapter 7 Chapter 3: Water
Chapter 8 "The Water Thieves"
Chapter 9 "South Africa's Driest Season"
Chapter 10 Chapter 4: The Earth's Crust
Chapter 11 "Behind Gold's Glitter: Torn Lands and Pointed Questions"
Chapter 12 Chapter 5: The Seas Around Us
Chapter 13 "The Fate of the Ocean"
Part 14 Part II: Consuming Culture
Chapter 15 Chapter 6: Consuming the Culture of SUVs
Chapter 16 "Empire's Ecological Tyreprints"
Chapter 17 Chapter 7: Ecotourism
Part 18 "The Obvious Aspects of Ecological Underprivilege in Ankarana, Northern Madagascar"
Chapter 19 Chapter 8: Technology and the Green Revolutions
Chapter 20 "Pepsico for Peace?: the Ecological and Political RIsks of the Biotechnology Revolution"
Chapter 21 Chapter 9: Global Trade of Electronic Waste
Chapter 22 "Where Computers go to Die - and Kill"
Part 23 Part III: Global Warming
Chapter 24 Chapter 10: The Atmosphere
Chapter 25 "Phaeton's Reins: THe Human Hand in Climate Change"
Chapter 26 Chapter 11: The Problem of a Rising Tide
Chapter 27 "All the Disappearing Islands"
Part 28 Part IV: Politics, Identity, and Justice
Chapter 29 Chapter 12: War and Mobilization
Chapter 30 "The Environment Consequences of War"
Chapter 31 Chapter 13: Globalization from Below in the Nuclear Pacific
Chapter 32 "The Movement for Environmental Justice in the Pacific"
Chapter 33 Chapter 14: Multinationals, China, and the Environment
Chapter 34 "China, the WTO and Implications for the Environment"
Chapter 35 Chapter 15: Globalization and the Burden of Critical Theory
Chapter 36 "Ecofeminism and Globalization: A Critical Appraisal"
This reader belongs in every environmental studies classroom. It is an essential guide to the big issues, a key to understanding how our species has transformed the planet, and why that transformation may end up making the earth uninhabitable.
— Richard Wilk, distinguished professor emeritus, Indiana University
This anthology will also be quite useful in a global environmental studies or an American environmental studies course seeking to understand and evaluate the impacts of American economic practices and globalization on the rest of the world. The book has a place outside the classroom as well as an effective primer on the number of crises that need to be challenged and some of the strategies for doing so. Specifically, it is definitely accessible to nonacademic readers.
— Journal of World History