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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jurgen BrauerPublisher: AltaMira Press Imprint: AltaMira Press Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 23.20cm Weight: 0.422kg ISBN: 9780759112070ISBN 10: 075911207 Pages: 252 Publication Date: 19 August 2011 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPreface Chapter 1. Globalization, Nature, and War Chapter 2. The Vietnam War Chapter 3. The Persian Gulf War Chapter 4. Civil War and Borderland Effects Chapter 5. War and Nature in a Globalized WorldReviewsWar and Nature makes a major contribution to the literature. The scholarship is exemplary and the author's command of the relevant literature is remarkable. This book should be required reading within governmental ministries of foreign affairs, environment, and defense. Officials and practitioners in intergovernmental agencies and international NGOs would also benefit from taking this book's information and message to heart. -- Arthur H. Westing Globalization has brought benefits to many, but these benefits have not come without costs. One of the hidden costs has been the increasingly negative impact of violent conflict on the environment. War and Nature provides a fresh perspective on this problem, drawing on concrete examples from Vietnam, the Persian Gulf, Central Africa, and Afghanistan. This evidence-based approach effectively provides guidance on how best to avoid environmental degradation in time of war, providing useful tools for politicians, peace-makers, and even the military. This book deserves wide circulation and broad discussion by both practitioners and academics. -- Jeffrey A. McNeely War and Nature would be a masterful summary, except that there have not been many studies of the effects of war on the environment, and even fewer prewar baseline studies of affected areas. So there is not much to summarize, but the book does provide thorough coverage of the existing data... The book contains abundant notes and other academic apparatus... Highly recommended. Choice, March 2010 War and Nature makes a major contribution to the literature. The scholarship is exemplary and the author’s command of the relevant literature is remarkable. This book should be required reading within governmental ministries of foreign affairs, environment, and defense. Officials and practitioners in intergovernmental agencies and international NGOs would also benefit from taking this book’s information and message to heart. -- Arthur H. Westing, former director, Project on Peace, Security and Environment, United Nations Environment Programme Globalization has brought benefits to many, but these benefits have not come without costs. One of the hidden costs has been the increasingly negative impact of violent conflict on the environment. War and Nature provides a fresh perspective on this problem, drawing on concrete examples from Vietnam, the Persian Gulf, Central Africa, and Afghanistan. This evidence-based approach effectively provides guidance on how best to avoid environmental degradation in time of war, providing useful tools for politicians, peace-makers, and even the military. This book deserves wide circulation and broad discussion by both practitioners and academics. -- Jeffrey A. McNeely, Chief Scientist, International Union for Conservation of Nature War and Nature would be a masterful summary, except that there have not been many studies of the effects of war on the environment, and even fewer prewar baseline studies of affected areas. So there is not much to summarize, but the book does provide thorough coverage of the existing data. . . . The book contains abundant notes and other academic apparatus. . . . Highly recommended. * CHOICE, March 2010 * It is remarkable that military impacts on nature have received little scientific attention. Jurgen Brauer deserves much praise for a systematic reckoning of resource use by military activities and of war’s environmental repercussions. Existing reliable information being scarce, he points the way toward establishing a research agenda and methodology. * Geographical Review * Globalization has brought benefits to many, but these benefits have not come without costs. One of the hidden costs has been the increasingly negative impact of violent conflict on the environment. War and Nature provides a fresh perspective on this problem, drawing on concrete examples from Vietnam, the Persian Gulf, Central Africa, and Afghanistan. This evidence-based approach effectively provides guidance on how best to avoid environmental degradation in time of war, providing useful tools for politicians, peace-makers, and even the military. This book deserves wide circulation and broad discussion by both practitioners and academics.--Jeffrey A. McNeely Author InformationJurgen Brauer is professor of economics at the James M. Hull College of Business, Augusta State University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |