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E-raamat: How the World Breaks: Life in Catastrophe's Path, from the Caribbean to Siberia

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Jul-2016
  • Kirjastus: The New Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781620970133
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Jul-2016
  • Kirjastus: The New Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781620970133

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In How the World Breaks, scientist and author Stan Cox and his son, anthropologist Paul Cox, take us on an breathtaking journey from typhoon-plagued central Philippines to the wildfire belts of Australia and Siberia, and to other regions where people are already living in the greenhouse future; from the slums of Mumbai and Kampala, where residents face repeated flooding so that the wealthy parts of the city can stay dry, to Indonesia, where tens of thousands have lost their homes to the decade-long eruption of a mud volcano caused by gas drilling; from the boom city of Miami, destined to become the Atlantis of the Americas as the world’s oceans rise, to other diverse scenes of past and future destruction. This journey reveals that as long as such destructive events are treated as natural,” and unless we address the social, ecological, and economic roots of disaster vulnerability, millions more people every year will find themselves spiraling into misery. Nandini, a teacher and a survivor of the devastating floods that struck the Indian Himalaya in 2013, put it this way: When you disturb the Earth, you bring out a bad reaction from her, like she is regurgitating the destruction.”

Anyone interested in the fate of those who live in our planet’s most dangerous places will want to read this book; in it, the Coxes eloquently challenge the increasingly common idea that the Earth’s inhabitants must simply get used to the idea that we’re going to be battered by more and worse catastrophes and therefore must simply become more resilient.” They argue that such an idea simply places the loss and the responsibility on the shoulders of the earth’s most vulnerable people and communities, leaving the the economically powerful free to make more money and more disasters. On the scene before, during, and after calamity strikes, the Coxes introduce us to the communities that are in the path of destruction and deathoften the most marginalized people in the worldand show us that change is more than adaptation and that life is more than just survival.

Arvustused

Praise for How the World Breaks:

"Highly recommended" —Library Journal





“A frightening, from-the-trenches overview of "natural" and man-made disasters—and responses to them—across the globe. —Kirkus Reviews





"This book, crafted with stunning, moving, and crisp story-telling, settles the score about the stark human fingerprint on our own civilizations agonies and misfortunes. It is clearly a battle we cannot afford to lose, and How the World Breaks is the reality jolt we need. I will hold Stan and Paul Cox responsible for that day when we walk towards a new dawn declaring triumph over the madness." —Yeb Saño, former climate diplomat and leader of the Peoples Pilgrimage



"A devastating account of how regular working people show great bravery and generosity in the face of disaster, but also how the sheer number of disasters can overwhelm a societys ability to recover." —Erik Loomis, author of Out of Sight





"With powerful prose and meticulous scrutiny, How the World Breaks strips naked the dynamics of risk creation and the consequent disasters. Alternating chapters of keen analysis and veracious case studies elucidate the false notion that disasters bring about beneficial change, demonstrate who profits as opposed to who pays the price, and illuminate how failed disaster policies have led to horrific duress. A must-read for everyone in all the fields relating to disaster studies, and indeed all who are asking what is breaking apart the world today." —Dr. Susanna Hoffman, editor of The Angry Earth and Catastrophe and Culture





"This is an important book. The Coxes with eyes wide deep see beneath the shimmering surface of progress and development. They name our demons, revealing how the assumptions we make for the sake of our behavior are burdening to death the most vulnerable people of the world and accelerating our demise." —Godfrey Reggio, director of the Qatsi trilogy



"In this period of ecological, social, and economic collapse, How The World Breaks is a must-read for all." —Dr. Vandana Shiva



"I found How the World Breaks intriguing and unexpected in how it uses major disasters to illuminate inequalities of both wealth and power—and cases where a society acted wisely." —Adam Hochschild, author of Spain in Our Hearts and other books



"Think climate change is a far off, distant threat? Then think again. In their must-read new book How the World Breaks, father and son team Stan and Paul Cox travel the world exploring how the devastating impacts of disasters are made notably worse by human-caused climate change." —Michael E. Mann, distinguished professor, Penn State University, and author of The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars







Praise for Losing Our Cool:

Stan was The Atlantic's Readers' Choice Brave Thinker



One of the Mother Nature Network "Top Ten Environmental Books of the Year"



“This is an important book. The history of air-conditioning is really the history of the worlds energy and climate crises, and by narrowing the focus Stan Cox makes the big picture comprehensible. He also suggests remedies—which are different from the ones favored by politicians, environmentalists, and appliance manufacturers, not least because they might actually work. —David Owen, New Yorker staff writer and author of Green Metropolis





“This book is the go-to source for a better understanding of the complexity of pumping cold air into a warming climate. —Maude Barlow



“Stan Cox, in his fascinating book Losing Our Cool, offers a long list of ways in which air conditioning has transformed the U.S. economy. —Bradford Plumer, The Washington Post





“As Stan Cox details in his excellent new book, Losing Our Cool, air conditioning has been a major force in shaping western society. —The National





“Stan Cox offers both some sobering facts and some interesting strategies for thinking through a big part of our energy dilemma. —Bill McKibben



“Well-written, thoroughly researched, with a truly global focus, the book offers much for consumers, environmentalists, and policy makers to consider before powering up to cool down. —Publishers Weekly

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(14)
1 Fire Regimes: Australia and Siberia
15(23)
2 Leave It Up to Batman: The Philippines
38(26)
3 Neighbors to the Sky: New York City
64(24)
4 Every Silver Lining
88(34)
5 Gray Goo: East Java, Indonesia
122(21)
6 How to Booby-Trap a Planet
143(17)
7 Foreshock, Shock, Aftershock: L'Aquila, Italy
160(15)
8 Atlantis of the Americas: Miami, Florida
175(23)
9 Engineer, Defend, Insure, Absorb, Leave
198(26)
10 The Absorbers: Mumbai, India, and Kampala, Uganda
224(14)
11 Vulnerability Seeps in Everywhere
238(19)
12 Keeping the Lights On: Montserrat, West Indies
257(21)
13 "We Do Things Big Here": Greensburg, Kansas, and Joplin, Missouri
278(20)
14 When Mountains Fall: Uttarakhand State, India
298(19)
Epilogue: Rainbow of Chaos 317(8)
Notes 325(62)
Index 387